2012-25764

Federal Register, Volume 77 Issue 213 (Friday, November 2, 2012)[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 213 (Friday, November 2, 2012)]

[Rules and Regulations]

[Pages 66287-66350]

From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]

[FR Doc No: 2012-25764]

[[Page 66287]]

Vol. 77

Friday,

No. 213

November 2, 2012

Part III

Commodity Futures Trading Commission

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17 CFR Parts 1, 4, 5, et al.

Adaptation of Regulations to Incorporate Swaps; Final Rule

Federal Register / Vol. 77 , No. 213 / Friday, November 2, 2012 /

Rules and Regulations

[[Page 66288]]

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COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION

17 CFR Parts 1, 4, 5, 7, 8, 15, 16, 18, 21, 22, 36, 38, 41, 140,

145, 155, and 166

RIN Number 3038-AD53

Adaptation of Regulations To Incorporate Swaps

AGENCY: Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

ACTION: Final rules.

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SUMMARY: The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act

(``Dodd-Frank Act'' or ``DFA'') established a comprehensive new

statutory framework for swaps and security-based swaps. The Dodd-Frank

Act repeals some sections of the Commodity Exchange Act (``CEA'' or

``Act''), amends others, and adds a number of new provisions. The DFA

also requires the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (``CFTC'' or

``Commission'') to promulgate a number of rules to implement the new

framework. The Commission has proposed and finalized numerous rules to

satisfy its obligations under the DFA. This rulemaking makes a number

of conforming amendments to integrate the CFTC's regulations more fully

with the new framework created by the Dodd-Frank Act.

DATES: Effective January 2, 2013.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Peter A. Kals, Special Counsel, 202-

418-5466, [email protected], Division of Clearing and Risk; Elizabeth

Miller, Attorney-Advisor, 202-418-5450, [email protected], Division of

Swap Dealer and Intermediary Oversight; David E. Aron, Counsel, 202-

418-6621, [email protected], Office of General Counsel; Alexis Hall-Bugg,

Attorney-Advisor, 202-418-6711, [email protected], Division of Market

Oversight; Katherine Driscoll, Senior Trial Attorney, 202-418-5544,

[email protected], Division of Enforcement, Commodity Futures Trading

Commission, Three Lafayette Centre, 1151 21st Street NW., Washington,

DC 20581.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

Table of Contents

I. Background

II. Amended Regulations

A. Part 1

1. Regulation 1.3: Definitions

a. General Changes

b. Various Amended and New Definitions (Regulation 1.3)

c. Regulation 1.3(t): Open Contract

d. Regulation 1.3(ll): Physical

e. Regulation 1.3(ss): Foreign Board of Trade

f. Regulation 1.3(yy): Commodity Interest

g. Regulation 1.3(z): Bona Fide Hedging Transactions and

Positions

h. Lack of a Definition of ``End-User'' in Regulation 1.3

2. Regulation 1.4: Use of Electronic Signatures

3. Regulation 1.31: Books and Records; Keeping and Inspection

4. Regulations 1.33: Monthly and Confirmation Statements

5. Regulation 1.35: Records of Cash Commodity, Futures and

Option Transactions

6. Regulation 1.37: Customer's or Option Customer's Name,

Address, and Occupation Recorded; Record of Guarantor or Controller

of Account

7. Regulation 1.39: Simultaneous Buying and Selling Orders of

Different Principals; Execution of, for and Between Principals

8. Regulation 1.40: Crop, Market Information Letters, Reports;

Copies Required

9. Regulation 1.59: Activities of Self-Regulatory Employees,

Governing Board Members, Committee Members and Consultants

10. Regulation 1.63: Service on Self-Regulatory Organization

Governing Boards or Committees by Persons With Disciplinary

Histories

11. Regulation 1.67: Notification of Final Disciplinary Action

Involving Financial Harm to a Customer

12. Regulation 1.68: Customer Election Not To Have Funds,

Carried by a Futures Commission Merchant for Trading on a Registered

Derivatives Trading Execution Facility, Separately Accounted for and

Segregated

13. Regulations 1.44, 1.53, and 1.62--Deletion of Regulations

Inapplicable to Designated Contract Markets

14. Technical Changes to Part 1 in Order to Accommodate Recently

Finalized Part 22 and Corresponding Changes to Part 22

B. Part 7

C. Part 8

D. Parts 15, 18, 21, and 36

E. Parts 41, 140 and 145

F. Parts 155 and 156

G. Other General Changes to CFTC Regulations

1. Removal of References to DTEFs

2. Other Conforming Changes

III. Administrative Compliance

A. Paperwork Reduction Act

B. Regulatory Flexibility Act

C. Consideration of Costs and Benefits

I. Background

On July 21, 2010, President Obama signed the Dodd-Frank Act into

law.\1\ Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Act \2\ (``Title VII'') amended the

CEA \3\ to establish a comprehensive new regulatory framework for swaps

and security-based swaps. The legislation was enacted, among other

reasons, to reduce risk, increase transparency, and promote market

integrity within the financial system by, among other things: (1)

Providing for the registration and comprehensive regulation of swap

dealers (``SDs''), security-based swap dealers, major swap participants

(``MSPs''), and major security-based swap participants; (2) imposing

clearing and trade execution requirements on swaps and security-based

swaps, subject to certain exceptions; (3) creating rigorous

recordkeeping and real-time reporting regimes; and (4) enhancing the

rulemaking and enforcement authorities of the Commissions with respect

to, among others, all registered entities and intermediaries subject to

the Commission's oversight.

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\1\ See Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection

Act, Public Law 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376 (2010). The text of the

Dodd-Frank Act is available at http://www.cftc.gov/LawRegulation/OTCDERIVATIVES/index.htm.

\2\ Pursuant to section 701 of the Dodd-Frank Act, Title VII may

be cited as the ``Wall Street Transparency and Accountability Act of

2010.''

\3\ 7 U.S.C. 1 et seq. (2006).

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To apply its regulatory regime to the swap activity of

intermediaries, the Commission must make a number of changes to its

regulations to conform them to the Dodd-Frank Act. On June 7, 2011, the

Commission published in the Federal Register a proposal to make such

changes (``the Proposal'').\4\ There was a 60-day period for the public

to comment on the Proposal, which ended on August 8, 2011. The

Commission received 39 comment letters from a variety of institutions,

including designated contract markets (``DCMs''), agricultural trade

associations, and agricultural cooperatives.\5\ The Commission has

determined to adopt the proposed rules primarily in the form proposed

with certain modifications, discussed below, to address the comments

the Commission received. With respect to certain of the proposed

changes to regulation 1.35 \6\ (regarding recording of oral

communications and the scope of written communications) and related

amendments to regulation 1.31, the Commission has determined to address

those changes in a final rule in a separate release.

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\4\ Adaptation of Regulations to Incorporate Swaps, 76 FR 33066

(June 7, 2011) (``Proposing Release'').

\5\ Comment letters are available in the comment file on

www.cftc.gov.

\6\ All Commission regulations are in Chapter I of Title 17 of

the CFR.

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The Commission is mindful of, and continues to consider, the

comments received on the Proposal's amendments to regulation 1.35

(records of commodity interest and cash commodity transactions). Those

comments were submitted by various groups, including DCMs,

representatives of the FCM and IB communities, energy

[[Page 66289]]

end-users, and agricultural trade associations and cooperatives.\7\

These commenters focused primarily on: the proposed oral communications

recordkeeping requirement, in general; the proposed requirement that

all members of a DCM or SEF, including unregistered commercial end-

users and non-intermediaries, keep records of the oral communications

that lead to the execution of a cash commodity transaction; and the

proposed requirement that each record be maintained in a separately

identifiable electronic file identifiable by transaction and

counterparty. Many of the comments were directed specifically toward

narrowing the scope of the proposed changes to regulation 1.35

regarding recording of oral communications and written communications

(and related amendments to regulation 1.31).

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\7\ Commenters on this issue include: American Cotton Shippers

Association; Agribusiness Association of Iowa; Agribusiness

Association of Ohio; Agribusiness Council of Indiana; Trade

Association of American Cotton Cooperatives; Commodity Markets

Council; Falmouth Farm Supply; American Feed Industry Association;

Grain and Feed Association of Illinois; Minnesota Grain and Feed

Association; National Grain and Feed Association; Oklahoma Grain and

Feed Association; Rocky Mountain Agribusiness Association; South

Dakota Grain and Feed Association; Land O'Lakes; National Council of

Farmer Cooperatives; American Gas Association; National Gas Supply

Association; Fertilizer Institute; American Petroleum Institute;

Electric Power Supply Association; National Rural Electric

Cooperative Association; American Public Power Association; Large

Public Power Council; Edison Electric Institute; Working Group of

Commercial Energy Firms; IntercontinentalExchange Inc.; Kansas City

Board of Trade; Minneapolis Grain Exchange; CME Group; Futures

Industry Association; Barclays Capital; Henderson & Lyman; National

Introducing Brokers Association; and National Futures Association.

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The amendments adopted by this rulemaking primarily affect part 1

of the Commission's regulations, but also affect parts 4, 5, 7, 8, 15,

16, 18, 21, 22, 36, 41, 140, 145, 155, and 166. This rulemaking

contains amendments of three different types: ministerial,

accommodating, and substantive. Many of the amendments are purely

ministerial--for instance, several changes update definitions to

conform them to the CEA as amended by the Dodd-Frank Act; add to the

Commission's regulations new terms created by the Dodd-Frank Act;

remove all regulations and references pertaining to derivatives

transaction execution facilities (``DTEFs''), a category of trading

facility added to the CEA by section 111 of the Commodity Futures

Modernization Act of 2000 (``CFMA''),\8\ which the DFA eliminated;

correct various statutory cross-references to the CEA in the

regulations; and remove regulations in whole or in part that were

rendered moot by the CFMA.

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\8\ Public Law 106-554, 114 Stat. 2763 (2000).

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The accommodating amendments are essential to the implementation of

the DFA in that they propose to add swaps, swap markets, and swap

entities to numerous definitions and regulations, but are more than

ministerial because they require some judgment in drafting.

Accommodating amendments include, among other things, amending numerous

definitions in regulation 1.3 to reference or include swaps; creating

new definitions as necessary in regulation 1.3; amending recordkeeping

requirements to include information on swap transactions; adding

references to swaps and swap execution facilities (``SEFs'') in various

part 1 regulations; and amending parts 15, 18, 21, and 36 to implement

the DFA's grandfathering and phase-out of exempt boards of trade and

exempt commercial markets.

The substantive amendments are changes that align requirements or

procedures across futures and swap markets. They consist of amendments

to regulation 1.31 that harmonize some of the current part 1

recordkeeping requirements with some of those applicable to SDs and

MSPs under part 23 regulations \9\ and amend procedures pertaining to

the post-execution allocation of bunched orders (regulation 1.35(a)).

Under the amendments to the bunched orders provisions, ``eligible

account managers'' can allocate such orders post-execution similarly to

how they currently do so with futures.

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\9\ See Swap Dealer and Major Swap Participant Recordkeeping,

Reporting, and Duties Rules; Futures Commission Merchant and

Introducing Broker Conflicts of Interest Rules; and Chief Compliance

Officer Rules for Swap Dealers, Major Swap Participants, and Futures

Commission Merchants, 77 FR 20128 (Apr. 3, 2012) (adopting for SDs

and MSPs reporting and recordkeeping standards now found in 17 CFR

23.201-23.203).

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To aid the public in understanding the numerous changes to

different parts of the CFTC's regulations adopted by this release, the

Commission will also publish on its Web site a ``redline'' of the

affected regulations which will clearly reflect the additions and

deletions.\10\

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\10\ The redline does not, in and of itself, have any legal

authority.

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II. Comments Received and Amended Regulations

A. General Comments

Several commenters argued that the Proposal was premature because

many other rules remained to be proposed and finalized,\11\ and

subsequent final rulemakings may dictate which conforming amendments

will be necessary. A joint letter by certain Electric Utility Trade

Associations (``the ETA'') contended that the incomplete nature of the

swap regulatory regime renders it unable to ``effectively comment,''

because it lacks a full understanding of the entire swap regulatory

landscape. In the ETA's view, the ``premature'' nature of the Proposal

rises to the level of a violation of the Administrative Procedures Act

(``APA'').\12\ The ETA commented further that because the Proposal

updated certain regulations by treating swaps equivalently to futures,

the Proposal ``represents a fundamental misunderstanding'' of the

executing electric industry swap market, and, consequently, should be

withdrawn. The ETA also noted that, ``[f]rom time to time, the

Commission's staff has declined to consider whether nonfinancial

commodity and related swap markets are indeed different in any

meaningful way from other markets,'' and that the ETA ``continues to

urge the Commission to engage in a considered analysis of such

differences and the implications of such differences for its rulemaking

process.'' The CME Group (``CME'') argued that the Commission should

have waited to propose the voice and electronic recordkeeping

requirements in regulation 1.35(a) until SEFs register, the Dodd-Frank

Act clearing and exchange trading requirements take effect, and Dodd-

Frank Act recordkeeping and reporting requirements take effect. The

Electric Power Supply Association (``EPSA'') commented that final rules

defining swap, SD, and MSP must be published prior to proposing a rule

conforming the Commission's regulations to the Dodd-Frank Act and

related regulations. Therefore, EPSA argued, the Proposal should be

withdrawn. Mr. Chris Barnard generally supported the Proposal,

commenting that the proposed changes were either common sense or

required by the DFA.

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\11\ A joint letter by the American Gas Association, Commodity

Markets Council, National Gas Supply Association, and the Fertilizer

Institute (``AGA et al.''); Commodity Markets Council (``CMC'');

Electric Power Supply Association; certain Electric Utility Trade

Associations; and the Working Group of Commercial Energy Firms

(``Working Group'').

\12\ See ETA Letter (claiming that ``[t]he [Proposal] cannot

fairly apprise interested persons of the nature of the Commission's

rulemaking, nor can it provide notice of `the terms of substance of

the proposed rule or a description of the subjects and issues

involved,' as required by the [APA], when the proposed rules purport

to adapt to a moving target.'').

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The Commission believes it was appropriate to have published the

Proposal when it did. The purpose of this rulemaking is to conform the

Commission's regulations to the CEA as

[[Page 66290]]

revised by the DFA where necessary (to avoid conflicting statutory and

regulatory definitions of the same term, for example) or desirable

(e.g., to make retention periods for records of all swap transactions

consistent with those recently adopted for the records of swap

transactions of SDs). The Commission viewed many of these changes to be

non-controversial. For example, the DFA amended the definition of FCM

in section 1a of the CEA to permit FCMs to execute and clear swaps for

customers in addition to futures. Accordingly, the Proposal updated

regulation 1.3's definition of FCM, as well as recordkeeping

requirements in regulations 1.31, 1.33, and 1.35, so that an FCM's

duties with respect to swaps would mirror its duties with respect to

futures. Because IBs and FCMs can execute or clear cleared swaps

analogously to futures, the Commission believes that certain of the

requirements in regulations 1.31, 1.33, and 1.35, which describe

recordkeeping requirements for FCMs and IBs, can and should apply

equivalently to an FCM's futures and cleared swaps business. In

response to the ETA's comment that the Proposal inappropriately equated

swaps with futures, the Commission notes that part 23 of the

Commission's regulations addresses issues unique to the swap market by

describing recordkeeping and other ``business conduct'' requirements

for SDs and MSPs.

The Commission believes it is appropriate to make these conforming

changes at this time. In adopting this final rule, the Commission is

incorporating any changes necessitated by other final Dodd-Frank Act

rulemakings.

B. Part 1

1. Regulation 1.3: Definitions

a. General Changes

The Commission is revising regulation 1.3 so that its definitions,

which are used throughout the Commission's regulations, incorporate

relevant provisions of the DFA. For instance, amended regulation 1.3

updates current definitions to conform them to the Dodd-Frank Act's

amendments of the same terms in the CEA's definitions section,\13\ and

also includes definitions specifically added by the Dodd-Frank Act to

the CEA. This is the case for many of the definitions in proposed

regulation 1.3, including ``commodity pool operator,'' ``commodity

trading advisor,'' ``futures commission merchant,'' ``introducing

broker,'' ``floor broker,'' ``floor trader,'' ``swap data repository,''

and ``swap execution facility.'' For example, section 721(a)(5) of the

DFA amended the definition of ``commodity pool operator'' (``CPO'') in

CEA section 1a to add swaps to those contracts for which soliciting

funds for a collective investment renders a person a CPO. Consequently,

today's final rulemaking updates the definition of CPO in regulation

1.3 to match the DFA's new definition of that term. The Commission did

not receive comments about the Proposal's revised definitions of

``commodity pool operator,'' ``commodity trading advisor,'' ``futures

commission merchant,'' ``floor broker,'' ``floor trader,'' ``swap data

repository,'' and ``swap execution facility.'' The Commission is

adopting these definitions as proposed.

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\13\ CEA section 1a, 7 U.S.C. 1a.

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In response to the proposed conforming amendments to the definition

of ``introducing broker,'' Financial Services Roundtable (``FSR'')

commented that a small commercial lender facilitating a swap

transaction between a borrower and a third party, solely in connection

with the lender's loan origination or syndication, should not have to

register as an introducing broker (``IB''), but could possibly be

required to do so under the amended definition. FSR commented further

that such a result would be inconsistent with a 2004 staff no-action

letter,\14\ in which the Commission's Division of Clearing and

Intermediary Oversight explained that the purpose of registering and

regulating IBs is to protect the public from sales abuses--according to

FSR, such a concern does not exist in the situation FSR described.

Specifically, FSR recommended that the Commission further define the

term ``introducing broker'' to specifically exclude the lenders it

described, or in the alternative, that the Commission issue

interpretative guidance addressing this issue.

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\14\ CFTC No-Action Letter No. 04-34 at 3 (Sept. 16, 2004).

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The Commission declines to further define the term ``introducing

broker'' as FSR requested, and is adopting the term as proposed.

However, the Commission believes that in the situation described by

FSR, the small commercial lender would not be required to register as

an IB, as long as it did not receive compensation from the third party

with whom the lender arranges the borrower's swap. This analysis is

based solely on the facts as presented by FSR in its comment letter and

is consistent with previously issued staff no-action or interpretative

letters.\15\ Staff can issue further guidance, as appropriate, on a

case-by-case basis under regulation 140.99.\16\

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\15\ FSR stated that the lenders it described receive

compensation ``in connection with lending and retaining risk and not

in connection with introducing a [swap provider].'' A key element of

both the previous and amended definitions of IB is that the person

engages in the described conduct ``for compensation or profit,

whether direct or indirect.'' 17 CFR 1.3(mm). This analysis is

consistent with past Commission guidance requiring an individual to

register as an IB based on referring customers to a commodity

trading advisor and receiving compensation in return. CFTC Interp.

Letter No. 86-27 (Introducing Broker Registration Requirements),

Comm. Fut. L. Rep. (CCH) ] 23,364, CFTC (Nov. 24, 1986). This letter

emphasized that ``the presence or absence or[sic] per-trade

compensation is not determinative of whether one falls within the

definition of an introducing broker. The Commission's final rule

expressly eliminated the form and manner of compensation as the

principal measure of whether registration as an introducing broker

would be required * * * [P]ursuant to the express terms of the

introducing broker definition in rule 1.3(mm), any compensation

(without regard to whether such compensation is per-trade or

otherwise) for the solicitation or acceptance of orders * * * brings

one within the definition.'' Id. (footnotes omitted). Therefore, if

the lenders FSR described receive compensation from the swap

providers for their customer referrals, then the lenders would fall

within the definition and be required to register as IBs.

\16\ Separately, the Commission notes that the activity of an

associated person ``AP'' of an SD may resemble the swap activity of

an IB. The definition of IB in regulation 1.3(mm), as amended by

today's final rule, excludes an AP, including an AP of an SD.

Pursuant to paragraph (6) of the definition of AP in regulation

1.3(aa), an AP of an SD could be an agent of the SD while not an

employee of the SD. This may be the case, for example, where an

employee of an affiliate of the SD is authorized to negotiate swap

transactions on behalf of the SD. Where such an agency relationship

is present, the Commission would not consider the employer of such

an AP of an SD to be an IB due to the activities of that AP of the

SD.

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Additionally, the Proposal revised the definition of ``self-

regulatory organization'' (``SRO'') (regulation 1.3(ee)) to include

SEFs, a new category of regulated markets under the DFA, and

derivatives clearing organizations (``DCOs''). The Commission did not

receive any comments concerning its proposal to amend this definition.

Today's final rulemaking amends the definition of SRO by including

SEFs. However, it does not amend the definition of SRO to include DCOs.

Upon further reflection, the Commission has determined that the part 1

regulations applicable to SROs need not apply to DCOs in light of

recently finalized regulations in part 39 implementing the Act's Core

Principles for DCOs.\17\ For example, paragraph (6) of regulation

39.12(a) (``Participant and product eligibility'') requires a DCO to

have the ability to enforce compliance

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with its participation requirements and to establish procedures for the

suspension and orderly removal of clearing members that no longer meet

the requirements. Moreover, the Commission is in the midst of other

rulemakings pertaining to the responsibilities of SROs and DCOs, e.g.,

proposed regulations regarding the governance of DCOs.\18\

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\17\ DCO General Provisions and Core Principles, 76 FR 69334

(Nov. 8, 2011).

\18\ Requirements for DCOs, DCMs, and SEFs Regarding the

Mitigation of Conflicts of Interest, 75 FR 63732 (Oct. 18, 2010);

and Governance Requirements for DCOs, DCMs, and SEFs; Additional

Requirements Regarding the Mitigation of Conflicts of Interest, 76

FR 722 (Jan. 6, 2011).

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b. Various Amended and New Definitions (Regulation 1.3)

The Commission is (1) simplifying or clarifying certain existing

regulation 1.3 definitions, and (2) adding several new definitions to

regulation 1.3, pursuant to amendments to the CEA by the Dodd-Frank

Act, existing regulations, and other amendments in the Proposal.

The term ``contract market,'' for instance, is not defined under

the CEA, and is currently defined under regulation 1.3(h) as ``a board

of trade designated by the Commission as a contract market under the

Commodity Exchange Act or in accordance with the provisions of part 33

of this chapter.'' In certain provisions throughout the Commission's

regulations, contract markets are also referred to as ``designated

contract markets.'' Because both terms are used interchangeably within

the regulations, the Commission has decided to revise the definition to

mean contract market and designated contract market (``DCM''). Proposed

regulation 1.3(h) contained one definition identified by the title

``Contract market; designated contract market.'' The proposed

definition also corrected an erroneous cross-reference to part 33 as

the regulations applicable to DCMs, which the Commission is correcting

by changing it to a reference to part 38 of the Commission's

regulations. No commenters addressed these changes. The Commission is

adopting the definition in regulation 1.3(h) as proposed with one

modification to reflect the fact that the Commission designates a board

of trade as a contract market ``under the Act and in accordance with

part 38'' as opposed to ``under the Act or in accordance with part

38.''

The Proposal contained a similar clarification regarding the

definition of ``customer.'' It simplified the definition of

``customer'' by combining two existing definitions, ``customer;

commodity customer'' in regulation 1.3(k) and ``option customer'' in

regulation 1.3(jj), and by adding swaps to the proposed definition.

Therefore, the proposed definition included swap customers, commodity

customers, and option customers, referring to them all with the single

term, ``customer.'' Furthermore, the Commission proposed to revise all

references to ``commodity customer'' and ``option customer'' throughout

the Commission's regulations, but particularly in part 1, to simply

refer to ``customer.'' \19\ The proposed revisions retained references

to requirements specific to certain contracts.\20\ Today's final

rulemaking revises the definition of ``customer'' (regulation 1.3(k)),

as proposed, and deletes the definition of ``option customer''

(regulation 1.3(jj)), as proposed. The Commission did not receive

comments about the proposed deletion of the term ``option customer.''

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\19\ The Commission proposed to remove references to commodity

customers and option customers, replacing them with references to

simply ``customer,'' in the following regulations: 17 CFR 1.3, 1.20-

1.24, 1.26, 1.27, 1.30, 1.32-1.34, 1.35-1.37, 1.46, 1.57, 1.59,

155.3, 155.4, and 166.5.

\20\ For example, proposed regulation 1.33 (Monthly and

confirmation statements) required an FCM to document a customer's

positions in futures contracts differently from its option or swap

positions. Proposed regulation 1.33 preserved these distinctions,

even though it referred only to ``customers'' as opposed to

``commodity customers,'' ``option customers,'' and ``swap

customers.''

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ETA commented that counterparties to electricity swap contracts are

not customers analogous to futures customers, and, therefore, by

expanding the ``customer'' concept to include entities that execute

swaps, the Commission would impose ``significant and inappropriate

obligations'' on swap counterparties. The Commission has decided to

finalize the definition of customer, as proposed. ETA is correct that

counterparties to bilaterally-executed swaps are principals, which is

unlike trading futures, where FCMs are agents of their customers.

However, FCMs will execute and clear swap transactions, as agents,

equivalently to the manner in which they currently execute and clear

futures transactions.

The Commission proposed to define the term ``confirmation'' to

reflect its differing use in various regulations depending on whether a

transaction is executed by an FCM, IB or CTA on the one hand, or by an

SD or MSP on the other hand. In the first case, the registrant is

acting as an agent. In the second, it is acting as a principal.\21\ No

commenters addressed the proposed definition of ``confirmation,'' and

the Commission has decided to adopt it as proposed.

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\21\ A single entity could be registered in more than one

capacity, for example, as both an SD and a CTA. Which rules were

applicable would depend on the capacity in which such an entity was

performing a particular function.

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The Commission proposed to add to regulation 1.3 a definition of

the term ``registered entity,'' currently provided in CEA section

1a(40), as revised by the Dodd-Frank Act. The proposed definition of

``registered entity'' is identical to its CEA counterpart and would

include DCOs, DCMs, SEFs, swap data repositories (``SDRs'') and certain

electronic trading facilities. To correspond with this new definition,

the Commission also proposed to replace the current ``Member of a

contract market'' definition with a new definition of ``Member,'' in

regulation 1.3(q), which would be nearly identical to the ``Member of a

registered entity'' definition provided in CEA section 1a(34), also as

revised by the Dodd-Frank Act.\22\ The proposed ``Member'' definition

was broadened to accommodate newly established SEFs, and it includes

those ``owning or holding membership in, or admitted to membership

representation on, the registered entity; or having trading privileges

on the registered entity.'' Additionally, for ease of reference,

proposed regulation 1.3 added several terms defined under the CEA,

using identical definitions, including ``electronic trading facility,''

``organized exchange,'' and ``trading facility.''

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\22\ In accordance with the removal of DTEF references from many

other Commission regulations, the proposed ``Member'' definition

would not include DTEF references currently in the definition of

``Member of a registered entity'' found in CEA section 1a(34). See 7

U.S.C. 1a(34).

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The ETA commented that the Commission should wait to define

``registered entity,'' ``organized exchange,'' ``electronic trading

facility,'' and ``trading facility'' until the Commission enters into

an MOU with FERC and publishes rules defining the scope of its

jurisdiction over nonfinancial energy commodity swaps. According to the

ETA, a SEF should not be deemed a registered entity. In addition, the

ETA does not believe SEF participants should fall within the

Commission's proposed definition of ``member,'' suggesting that it is

inappropriate or premature to require SEF participants to have the same

recordkeeping requirements as DCM members under regulation 1.35.

The Commission disagrees with the ETA's comment that it should wait

to define the terms ``registered entity,'' ``organized exchange,''

``electronic trading facility'' and ``trading facility'' until the

Commission enters into an MOU with FERC and publishes rules defining

the scope of its jurisdiction

[[Page 66292]]

over nonfinancial energy commodity swaps. As explained in the Proposal,

the definitions proposed for each of those terms are identical to their

statutory definitions under the CEA. The Commission may further define

these terms in the future if necessitated by an MOU with FERC or by

Commission rules defining the scope of its jurisdiction over

nonfinancial energy commodity swaps.

With respect to the ETA's assertion that SEFs should not be deemed

``registered entities,'' the Commission notes that SEFs are already

deemed ``registered entities'' under section 1a(40) of the CEA. Lastly,

the term ``member,'' as defined under the CEA, includes ``with respect

to a registered entity * * * an individual, association, partnership,

corporation or trust * * * having trading privileges on the registered

entity.'' \23\ Accordingly, the CEA considers participants on a SEF

``members'' by virtue of their having trading privileges on the SEF.

For the foregoing reasons, the Commission is adopting the definitions

of ``registered entity,'' ``organized exchange,'' ``electronic trading

facility,'' ``trading facility,'' and ``member'' as proposed.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

\23\ CEA section 1a(34), 7 U.S.C. 1a(34).

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The Commission also proposed to add a definition of the term

``order.'' This term had not previously been defined by Commission

regulations, although it is used in several of them, e.g., 17 CFR 1.35,

155.3, and 155.4. In light of this, and with the addition of new

categories of registrants (SDs and MSPs) who act as principals rather

than agents, clarification of this term is appropriate. No commenters

addressed the proposed definition, and the Commission is adopting it as

proposed.

Because proposed amendments to regulation 1.31 incorporated the

term ``prudential regulator,'' as added to the CEA by the Dodd-Frank

Act, the Commission proposed to define the term in regulation 1.3.\24\

The proposed definition of ``prudential regulator'' in regulation 1.3

is coextensive with the definition in section 1a(39) of the Act and

lists the various prudential regulators. No commenters addressed this

proposed definition, but the amendments to regulation 1.31 adopted

today no longer reference the term ``prudential regulator.''

Nonetheless, the Commission has determined to adopt the definition as

proposed, in anticipation of future rulemakings and regulations

possibly using the term ``prudential regulator.''

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\24\ Proposing Release, 76 FR at 33068 and 33070. Pursuant to

proposed regulation 1.31, records of swap transactions must be

presented, upon request, to ``any applicable prudential regulator as

that term is defined in section 1a(39) of the Act.'' Id. at 33088.

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The Commission also proposed to add the term ``registrant'' to

regulation 1.3 so that certain regulations in part 1 could refer to

various intermediaries (e.g., FCMs, IBs, CPOs), their employees

(associated persons), and other registrants (MSPs). Because the DFA

created a definition of and several Commission regulations refer to

``associated persons of swap dealers or major swap participants,'' the

Commission proposed to add that term to regulation 1.3 as well. No

commenters addressed these changes, but the Commission will only be

adopting the definition of ``registrant'' as proposed. Since the

Proposal's publication, a separate final rulemaking establishing the

registration process for SDs and MSPs amended the existing definition

of ``associated person'' found in regulation 1.3(aa) to incorporate

associated persons of SDs and MSPs in a manner consistent with CEA

section 1a, as amended by the Dodd-Frank Act.\25\ In light of that

rulemaking, the Commission is not adopting a separate definition of

``associated person of swap dealers and major swap participants'' in

regulation 1.3.

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\25\ Registration of Swap Dealers and Major Swap Participants,

77 FR 2613, 2615 and 2625 (Jan. 19, 2012).

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The Commission also proposed, and is hereby adopting, a definition

of the term ``retail forex customer'' in regulation 1.3 because it

appears in several regulations in part 1 and currently is only defined

in part 5. The definition is identical in all material respects to the

definition of this term as it currently appears in regulation

5.1(k).\26\ The Commission did not receive any comments to the

Proposal's addition of a definition of ``retail forex customer'' to

regulation 1.3.

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\26\ 17 CFR 5.1(k) currently defines ``retail forex customer''

as ``a person, other than an eligible contract participant as

defined in section 1a(12) of the Act, acting on its own behalf and

trading in any account, agreement, contract or transaction described

in section 2(c)(2)(B) or 2(c)(2)(C) of the Act.'' This final

rulemaking amends the definition in part 5 only to reflect the

renumbering of section 1a of the CEA by the Dodd-Frank Act, and adds

an identically amended definition to regulation 1.3. See infra Part

II.G.2.

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The Commission is also finalizing the revised definition of

``strike price'' (regulation 1.3(kk)) as proposed so that this

definition encompasses swaps in addition to futures. The Commission

received no comments about this proposal.

c. Regulation 1.3(t): Open Contract

The Proposal changed the defined term from ``open contract'' to

``open position'' and added provisions for commodity option

transactions and swaps. CME commented that it is unclear whether the

proposed definition is intended to cover options on swaps. If so, then

the word ``commodity'' should be deleted from the phrase, ``commodity

option transaction.'' According to CME's comment letter to the

Proposal, the Commission should also clarify whether, or which, options

are covered by proposed paragraph (t)(3) (swaps). CME also argues that

proposed paragraph (t)(3) does not adequately characterize open

positions in cleared swaps. Proposed paragraph (t)(1)'s terminology,

CME believes, more appropriately characterizes cleared swaps because,

like futures, cleared swaps may be fulfilled by delivery or they may be

offset.

The Commission has decided to finalize the definition with a few

modifications. The final definition retains the original title of the

term, ``open contract.'' It also narrows its applicability from all

swaps to only Cleared Swaps, as regulation 22.1 defines that term.\27\

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\27\ Regulation 22.1 was promulgated as part of Protection of

Cleared Swaps Customer Contracts and Collateral; Conforming

Amendments to the Commodity Broker Bankruptcy Provisions, 77 FR 6336

(Feb. 7, 2012).

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The Commission notes that the option component of the definition

(paragraph (t)(2)) covers all options: i.e., options on futures;

options on swaps (``swaptions''); and options on commodities.\28\ In

response to CME's comment, the Commission notes that although, pursuant

to the Dodd-Frank Act, swaptions and options on commodities (other than

options on futures) are swaps, it is nevertheless appropriate for the

definition of ``open contract'' to describe them with language suitable

only to options and not to other swaps. In other words, the definition

of ``open contract'' merely describes types of contracts; it is not

intended to classify these contracts for regulatory purposes or to

elaborate on the definition of ``swap,'' which the Commission recently

published in final form.\29\

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\28\ Section 4c of the CEA grants the Commission authority over

all three of these categories of options.

\29\ See Further Definition of ``Swap,'' ``Security-Based

Swap,'' and ``Security-Based Swap Agreement''; Mixed Swaps;

Security-Based Swap Agreement Recordkeeping, 77 FR 48207 (Aug. 13,

2012).

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Because the only references in the regulations to the term ``open

contracts'' apply to cleared contracts, i.e. futures contracts and

Cleared Swaps, the final definition only includes Cleared Swaps in

paragraph (t)(3). The final rule also

[[Page 66293]]

modifies paragraph (t)(3) to reflect the fact that Cleared Swaps can be

fulfilled by delivery or by offset against other Cleared Swaps, as is

the case with futures. Thus, paragraph (t)(3) states in final form,

``swaps that have not been fulfilled by delivery; not offset; not

expired; and not been terminated.''

In the Proposal, pursuant to the revision of the definition of

``open contract'' in regulation 1.3(t), the Commission proposed to

change ``open contract'' to ``open position'' in regulations 1.33

(``Monthly and confirmation statements'') and 1.34 (``Monthly record,

`point balance' ''). The Commission did not receive comments about

these changes. In light of the fact that the Commission is retaining

the title ``open contract,'' in the final revisions to regulation

1.3(t), the Commission is preserving those references to ``open

contract'' in regulations 1.33 and 1.34.\30\

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\30\ See infra section II.A.4. (discussing amendments to

regulation 1.33).

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d. Regulation 1.3(ll): Physical

i. Proposal

As part of the Proposal, the Commission explained that current

regulation 1.3(ll) defines ``physical'' as ``any good, article,

service, right or interest upon which a commodity option may be traded

in accordance with the Act and these regulations.'' \31\ The Commission

noted that, other than the reference to options, the term ``physical''

was similar to the definition of ``commodity'' in regulation 1.3(e),

which includes, in relevant part ``all * * * goods and articles * * *

and all services, rights and interests in which contracts for future

delivery are presently or in the future dealt in.'' The quoted portions

of the ``physical'' and ``commodity'' definitions are effectively the

same, differing only in the potential overlying instrument with respect

to which the respective terms are defined. In addition, the Commission

noted that the introductory language in regulation 1.3 provides that

``[t]he following terms, as used in the rules and regulations of this

chapter, shall have the meaning hereby assigned to them, unless the

context otherwise requires.'' \32\

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\31\ Proposing Release, 76 FR at 33068-69.

\32\ Id. at 33069.

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In the Proposal, the Commission also traced the history of the term

``physical'' in its regulations, noting that the definition of

``physical'' was first added to its regulations ``to enable trading, on

DCMs, in options to buy or sell an underlying commodity'' and that the

definition had not been substantively amended.\33\ The Commission added

that, in 1982, when the Commission proposed to add the definition of

``physical'' to its regulations, ``cash-settled futures on non-physical

commodities had just been introduced in the form of the Chicago

Mercantile Exchange's Eurodollar futures'' and that, ``[i]n that

context * * * it made sense to name such options based on physical

commodities, which constituted the vast majority of commodities covered

by then-existing futures contracts.'' \34\ While options may have

primarily been written on physical commodities in 1982, the Commission

noted in the Proposal that ``[a]t present * * * options may be traded

on both physically deliverable and non-physically deliverable

commodities, such as interest rates and temperatures'' and that, given

that change, using the term ``physical'' to refer to an option on both

physically deliverable and non-physically deliverable commodities may

be confusing.\35\ The Commission added that the intended-to-be-

physically-settled element of the forward exclusion from the swap

definition ``would be meaningless if `physical' included non-

physical.'' \36\

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

\33\ Id. at 33069.

\34\ Id.

\35\ Id.

\36\ Id.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

In light of (1) The overlapping definitions of ``commodity'' and

``physical'' in Commission regulation 1.3, (2) the fact that options

now are written on a wide range of non-physical commodities, and (3)

the Commission's desire that the term ``physical'' not be interpreted

to permit cash settled transactions to rely on the forward exclusion

from the swap definition (unless otherwise permitted by Commission

interpretations with respect to such exclusion, such as those discussed

in the Commission's rulemaking jointly (with the Securities and

Exchange Commission) further defining ``swap''), the Commission, in the

Proposal, requested comment on various possible approaches to the

definition of ``physical'' in regulation 1.3(ll). One possible approach

on which the Commission requested comment was whether it should

eliminate the definition, on the theory that its meaning is self-

evident, and rely on the ability of interested parties to interpret the

term ``physical.'' The Commission also requested comment on not

amending the definition in reliance upon the introductory language in

regulation 1.3, which applies the regulation 1.3(ll) definition of

``physical'' unless the context otherwise requires.

ii. Comments

Three commenters addressed the definition of physical in regulation

1.3(ll). The ETA commented that the proposed definition of ``physical''

should be withdrawn because addressing it in terms of swaps is

premature prior to the Commission publishing the further definition of

``swap,'' including, in particular, defining the term ``nonfinancial

commodity,'' which the ETA characterized as a key component of the

forward exclusion from the swap definition. The ETA stated that, in

proposing such a substantive rule, the Commission must explain how

defining ``physical'' would affect all of its regulations and requested

that the Commission re-propose any revised definition of ``physical''

with a ``comprehensive analysis of the way such word, whether used as

an adjective or an adverb, interrelates with the Dodd-Frank statutory

term `nonfinancial commodity,' as well as the concepts of `cash

market,' `physical market channels' and the `bona fide hedging

exemption'.''

The Environmental Markets Association (``EMA'') believes that the

``very broad'' definition of the word ``physical'' in current

Commission regulations ``certainly'' encompasses environmental

commodities, which the EMA states are subject to the forward exclusion

from the definition of swap. The EMA requested that the CFTC issue a

final rule clarifying that environmental commodities are not swaps even

though intangible, that they are nonfinancial commodities that can rely

on the forward exclusion, and that intangibility of a commodity does

not prevent it from being ``physically settled.'' The Coalition for

Emission Reduction Policy (``CERP'') similarly argued that

environmental and other intangible commodity transactions that result

in actual delivery of a commodity, intangible or not, as opposed to

transactions that settle in cash, can be subject to the forward

exclusion because such transactions can be physically settled. CERP

also claimed that the Commission's proposed interpretation of forward

contracts in nonfinancial commodities in the definition of ``swap''

supports its interpretation of ``physically settled'' in that forward

sales of environmental commodities are commercial merchandising

transactions because both buyer and seller ultimately need and intend

the transfer of ownership of the emission allowances or offset credits.

[[Page 66294]]

EMA also expressed that the Commission's request for comment with

regard to whether the definition of ``physical'' should rely on the

``common sense meaning'' of the word was unclear. In particular, EMA

argued that environmental commodities traded in the spot or forward

markets are physically delivered via a registry or an exchange of

paperwork and eventually consumed through retirement. Further,

according to EMA, environmental commodities are goods because Uniform

Commercial Code (``UCC'') section 2105(1) defines ``good'' as

``anything that can be moved other than money.''

iii. Final Rules

The Commission is removing from regulation 1.3(ll) the definition

of ``physical,'' which term will therefore have the meaning dictated by

the context of the individual Commission regulations in which it

appears. In addition, the Commission is adopting conforming changes to

other regulations to address the deletion of the definition. The

Commission is adopting these changes for ease of reference for market

participants and to reduce confusion in interpreting the Commission's

regulations, consistent with the spirit of Executive Order 13563, which

seeks, among other goals, to eliminate agency regulations that have

outlived their usefulness.\37\ As explained further below, these

modifications are not intended to alter the substantive provisions of

the Commission's regulations.

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\37\ See Executive Order 13563 of January 18, 2011, Improving

Regulation and Regulatory Review, at section 6(a), 76 FR 3821, 3822

(Jan. 21, 2011) (stating ``To facilitate the periodic review of

existing significant regulations, agencies shall consider how best

to promote retrospective analysis of rules that may be outmoded,

ineffective, insufficient, or excessively burdensome, and to modify,

streamline, expand, or repeal them in accordance with what has been

learned.'').

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When the Commission added the definition of ``physical'' to

regulation 1.3 in 1982, the intent was to distinguish between options

on futures contracts and other options subject to the Commission's

jurisdiction; the Commission termed such other options ``options on

physicals.'' The Commission added the ``physical'' definition because,

while the 1982 rulemaking including provisions applicable both to DCM-

listed options on futures and DCM-listed options on commodities, it

also contained regulations applicable solely to options on futures.

Thus, the purpose of the definition was ``principally to enable the

Commission to differentiate, where necessary, between references to

options on physicals and options on futures contracts.'' \38\ Although

the intent of Commission regulation 1.3(ll) was only to address the

distinction between options on futures and other options, the

Commission believes that the use of such a broad term to apply to a

narrow circumstance can create confusion because the definition is not

expressly so limited. While the introduction to regulation 1.3 says

that the definitions therein have the meanings set forth therein unless

the context otherwise requires, determining when regulation 1.3(ll)

applies as drafted and when the context dictates a different meaning

can be subjective and result in confusion.

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\38\ Domestic Exchange-Traded Commodity Options; Expansion of

Pilot Program To Include Options on Physicals, 47 FR 56996, 56998

(Dec. 22, 1982).

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

The Commission did not intend, when it promulgated the definition

in regulation 1.3(ll), to apply it to circumstances such as the

definition of ``physically'' settled. Given the intent of the

definition of the term ``physical'' (to distinguish options on futures

from other options) and the introductory language in regulation 1.3

regarding contextual interpretations of the defined terms therein, in

regulations where it is not necessary to distinguish between different

types of options, the definition of ``physical'' in Commission

regulation 1.3(ll) is not useful and can be overbroad. For example, the

definition of ``physical'' is not useful with respect to the term

``physical safeguards'' in regulation 160.30, which pertains to

procedures to safeguard customer records and information. Because the

scope of the definition of ``physical'' essentially includes options on

any commodity, which would include non-physical commodities such as

temperatures and interest rates, effectively, the restriction that

``physical'' in regulation 1.3(ll) is limited to any goods, article,

service, right or interest upon which a commodity may be traded in

accordance with the CEA and the Commission's regulations is not much of

a restriction at all.

The Commission also notes that it recently promulgated final and

interim final rules amending parts 32 and 33 of the Commission's

regulations.\39\ While part 33 continues to address options on futures

contracts, the other options subject to the Commission's jurisdiction

that also were previously addressed in part 33 now are addressed in

part 32 rather than in part 33. Further, the Commission no longer

refers to such other options as ``options on physicals.'' Instead, the

Commission generally uses the term ``commodity option'' as a reference

to both options on futures and other CFTC-jurisdictional options. Where

the Commission distinguishes the regulatory treatment for options on

futures from the regulatory treatment of other options, it specifically

identifies options on futures as ``commodity option transactions on a

contract of sale of a commodity for future delivery.'' With these

recent amendments, the definition of ``physical'' in regulation 1.3(ll)

will not help to distinguish between options on futures and other

commodity options because the rules generally addressing the regulatory

treatment of other commodity options no longer use the term

``physical'' to refer to such transactions.

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\39\ Commodity Options, 77 FR 25320 (Apr. 27, 2012).

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

In light of these considerations, the Commission believes that

deleting the definition of physical will reduce the potential for

confusion on the part of market participants, as the appropriate

definition of that term will be based on the context of the individual

rules in which the term is utilized. These amendments will also serve

the goals of Executive Order 13563 by amending the Commission's

regulations because they no longer are ``effective[] in achieving the

objectives for which they were adopted.'' \40\

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\40\ Reducing Regulatory Burden; Retrospective Review Under E.O.

13563, 76 FR 38328 (June 30, 2011).

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Further, various Commission regulations relating to options also

refer to a ``physical'' when discussing an option on a commodity. In

order to conform those regulations with the adapting changes discussed

above, the Commission is adopting a number of non-substantive changes

including, but not limited to, replacing certain references to

``physical'' with references to ``commodity.'' Where appropriate, the

Commission is also replacing references to ``underlying physical'' with

references to ``underlying commodity.''

For the reasons discussed above, these conforming amendments will

not result in substantive changes. Therefore, the Commission is

amending the following regulations as described above: Regulations

1.3(kk); 1.3(ll); 1.17(c)(1)(iii), (c)(5)(ii)(A), and (c)(5)(xiii)(C);

1.33; 1.34(b); 1.35(b)(2)(iii), (b)(3), (d) and (e); 1.39(a) and

(a)(3); 1.46(a)(1)(iii) and (iv); 4.23(a) and (b); 4.33(b)(1);

15.00(p)(1)(ii); 16.00(a); and 16.01(a)(1)(ii) and (iv), and (b)(1)(ii)

and (iv). The Commission is leaving unchanged other references to

``physical'' in its existing definitions because, given the context in

which the term is used in those rules, such

[[Page 66295]]

references are limited to physical commodities.

The Commission is replacing the word ``physical'' in regulations

1.17(c)(1)(iii) and 1.17(c)(5)(xi) with the word ``commodity,'' and is

replacing the word ``physical'' in regulation 1.17(c)(5)(ii)(A) with

the term ``physical commodity.'' In so doing, the Commission does not

intend to change the meaning of any of these paragraphs. Thus, final

regulations 1.17(c)(1)(iii) and 1.17(c)(5)(xi) will continue to apply

to options that overly any commodity, not just a tangible commodity. By

contrast, final regulation 1.17(c)(5)(ii)(A) will continue to apply to

the options described therein, which cover tangible commodities only.

While some commenters requested that the Commission interpret

``physical'' for purposes of the term ``physically settled'' within the

forward exclusion for swaps, or generally address the definition of

``physical'' as it relates to other terms, the Commission declines to

do so for purposes of this release. The conforming amendments to the

definition of physical are non-substantive changes that are designed to

increase clarity for market participants. As noted above, rather than

have a definition of physical that applies unless the context

``otherwise requires,'' the Commission will apply the definition based

on the particular context of the applicable regulation. Because the

current definition already applies in this manner, the modifications

addressed herein do not amount to a substantive change in the

regulations.

e. Regulation 1.3(ss): Foreign Board of Trade

The Commission proposed to amend the definition of foreign board of

trade to mean ``any board of trade, exchange or market located outside

the United States, its territories or possessions, whether incorporated

or unincorporated where foreign futures, foreign options, or foreign

swap transactions are entered into.'' The Commission received no

comments regarding the proposed definition of ``foreign board of

trade'' and is modifying the proposed definition to make it consistent

with the definition provided in the final rulemaking for Registration

of Foreign Boards of Trade.\41\ Accordingly, new regulation 1.3(ss)

defines the term ``foreign board of trade'' as ``any board of trade,

exchange or market located outside the United States, its territories

or possessions, whether incorporated or unincorporated.''

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\41\ Registration of Foreign Boards of Trade, 76 FR 80674 (Dec.

23, 2011).

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f. Regulation 1.3(yy): Commodity Interest

The Commission proposed adding ``swap'' to the definition of

``commodity interest'' in regulation 1.3(yy).\42\ Currently, commodity

interest is defined as: ``(1) Any contract for the purchase or sale of

a commodity for future delivery; (2) Any contract, agreement or

transaction subject to Commission regulation under section 4c or 19 of

the Act; and (3) Any contract, agreement or transaction subject to

Commission jurisdiction under section 2(c)(2) of the Act.'' At the time

of the proposal, the term was cross-referenced by 33 other Commission

regulations and appendices to parts of Commission regulations.\43\

Generally, the term ``commodity interest'' is meant to encompass all

agreements, contracts and transactions within the Commission's

jurisdiction, though not all such agreements, contracts and

transactions are expressly set forth therein.\44\

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\42\ Proposing Release, 76 FR at 33069.

\43\ See 17 CFR 1.12, 1.56, 1.59, 3.10, 3.12, 3.21, 4.6, 4.7,

4.10, 4.12-4.14, 4.22-4.25, 4.30-4.34, 4.36, 4.41, 30.3, 160.3-

160.5, and 166.1-166.3; 17 CFR pt. 3 app. B, 17 CFR pt. 4 app. A,

and 17 CFR pt. 190 app. B.

\44\ For example, the term ``contract for the purchase or sale

of a commodity for future delivery'' in current regulation

1.3(yy)(1) encompasses security futures products. Similarly, the

term ``swap'' would include mixed swaps (though mixed swaps are

swaps, they also are security-based swaps, so the Commission shares

authority over mixed swaps with the SEC). Of course, the impact of

the scope of proposed regulation 1.3(yy) is only as extensive as the

other regulations referencing it.

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The Dodd-Frank Act added a definition of the term ``swap'' to the

CEA.\45\ DFA section 712(d)(1) requires the Commission to further

define the term ``swap'' jointly with the Securities and Exchange

Commission (``SEC''), and the Commission has recently adopted

regulations further defining the term ``swap,'' among other terms,

jointly with the SEC.\46\

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\45\ DFA section 721(a)(21); codified at 7 U.S.C. 1a(47).

\46\ Further Definition of ``Swap,'' ``Security-Based Swap,''

and ``Security-Based Swap Agreement''; Mixed Swaps; Security-Based

Swap Agreement Recordkeeping, 77 FR 48207 (August 13, 2012)

(adopting 17 CFR 1.3(xxx), which defines the term ``Swap'').

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

In their comment letter, the ETA objected to the Proposal's

addition of the term ``swap'' to the definition of commodity interest

because, as discussed on page 6, above, the ETA objected to the manner

in which the Proposal analogized swaps to futures. The Commission

believes it is appropriate to add ``swap'' to the definition of

commodity interest because the Dodd-Frank Act amended various

intermediary definitions in section 1a of the Act (the Dodd-Frank Act

updated the definitions of CPO, CTA, FCM, IB, Floor Trader and Floor

Broker) to include their use of swaps. For example, the Act's present

definition of FCM, as amended by the Dodd-Frank Act, authorizes this

intermediary to accept customer orders for ``swaps'' in addition to

accepting customer orders for ``the purchase or sale of any commodity

for future delivery.'' If the Commission did not update the definition

of ``commodity interest'' to include swaps, then various regulations

applicable to intermediaries using the term ``commodity interest''

would not apply to intermediaries' swap activities. The Commission has

reviewed all uses of the term ``commodity interest'' throughout the

regulations and believes they appropriately refer to both futures and

swaps.

Thus, the Commission has decided to finalize a revised definition

of ``commodity interest'' by adding paragraph (yy)(4) to include swaps.

The final version adopted today makes only minor changes to the

proposed paragraph. Whereas the proposed paragraph referenced ``any

swap as defined in the Act, the Commission's regulations, a Commission

order or interpretation, or a joint interpretation or order issued by

the Commission and the [SEC],'' amended regulation 1.3(yy)(4) now

states ``any swap as defined in the Act, by the Commission, or jointly

by the Commission and the Securities and Exchange Commission.'' The

Commission is making this change because, for the purposes of the

definition of ``commodity interest,'' it does not matter whether the

Commission defines a swap pursuant to an order, interpretation, or

joint interpretation.

g. Regulation 1.3(z): Bona Fide Hedging Transactions and Positions

The Proposal made technical amendments to this definition by

omitting references to regulations 1.47 and 1.48 because the proposed

rule on Position Limits deleted those regulations \47\ and omitting

references to ``option customers'' on account of this rulemaking's

deletion of that term. The Commission is not promulgating these

amendments in this rulemaking because the final rule on Position Limits

has already extensively revised regulation

[[Page 66296]]

1.3(z).\48\ Mr. Chris Barnard commented that the definition of ``bona

fide hedging transactions and positions'' should be amended to state

that such transactions ``are not held for a purpose that is in the

nature of speculation or trading'' and ``not held to hedge or mitigate

the risk of another position, unless that other position itself is held

for the purpose of reducing risk.'' Mr. Barnard commented further that

the determination of whether a transaction meets the definition should

be made at the time the transaction is entered into, considering the

circumstances existing at that time. The Commission has decided not to

amend regulation 1.3(z) pursuant to these comments, which address

substantive issues that are beyond the scope of this rulemaking.

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\47\ Position Limits for Derivatives, 76 FR 4752 (Jan. 26,

2011).

\48\ Position Limits for Futures and Swaps, 76 FR 71626 (Nov.

18, 2011).

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h. Lack of a Definition of ``End-User'' in Regulation 1.3

The ETA requested that the Commission, the SEC, and prudential

regulators agree on a definition of ``end-user'' because the DFA does

not define this term and regulators have used the term inconsistently.

The Proposal did not add a definition of ``end-user'' to regulation 1.3

because the DFA did not add a definition of that term to CEA section

1a. The Proposal's intention was to conform the Commission's

regulations to the DFA's revisions to the CEA.

The Commission has decided not to add a definition of ``end-user.''

The Commission has no reason to define ``end-user'' because the

Commission's regulations do not use this term, and even the recently

adopted Commission regulations implementing the CEA's end-user

exception to clearing do not define it.\49\ The issue of whether the

Commission's regulations should use the term ``end-user'' is beyond the

scope of this final rulemaking.

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\49\ Recently adopted regulation 39.6 establishes the end-user

exception to clearing by defining which parties are eligible to opt

out of the clearing requirement pursuant to section 2(h)(7) of the

CEA, as amended by the DFA. See End-User Exception to the Clearing

Requirement for Swaps, 77 FR 42560 (July 19, 2012).

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2. Regulation 1.4: Use of Electronic Signatures

The Commission proposed to revise regulation 1.4 to extend the

benefit of electronic signatures and other electronic actions to SDs

and MSPs. Section 731 of the Dodd-Frank Act amended the CEA by adding

new section 4s(i)(1), requiring SDs and MSPs to ``conform with such

standards as may be prescribed by the Commission by rule or regulation

that relate to timely and accurate confirmation, processing, netting,

documentation, and valuation of all swaps,'' \50\ and adding new

section 4s(i)(2), requiring the Commission to adopt rules ``governing

documentation standards for swap dealers and major swap participants.''

\51\

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\50\ 7 U.S.C. 6s(i)(1).

\51\ 7 U.S.C. 6s(i)(2).

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Pursuant to the foregoing authority, the Commission has adopted new

regulation 23.501(a)(1), which requires ``[e]ach swap dealer and major

swap participant entering into a swap transaction with a counterparty

that is a swap dealer or major swap participant [to] execute a

confirmation for the swap transaction,'' according to a specified

schedule.\52\ Also pursuant to the foregoing authority, the Commission

has adopted a new regulation 23.501(a)(2), which requires ``[e]ach swap

dealer and major swap participant entering into a swap transaction with

a counterparty that is not a swap dealer or a major swap participant

[to] send an acknowledgment of such swap transaction'' according to a

specified schedule.\53\ Regulation 23.500(a) defines such an

``acknowledgment'' as ``a written or electronic record of all of the

terms of a swap signed and sent by one counterparty to the other.''

\54\ In proposing the confirmation and acknowledgment rules, the

Commission explained that ``[w]hen one party acknowledges the terms of

a swap and its counterparty verifies it, the result is the issuance of

a confirmation.'' \55\

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\52\ Confirmation, Portfolio Reconciliation, Portfolio

Compression, and Swap Trading Relationship Documentation

Requirements for Swap Dealers and Major Swap Participants, 77 FR

55904, 55961 (September 11, 2012).

\53\ Id.

\54\ Id.

\55\ Confirmation, Portfolio Reconciliation, and Portfolio

Compression Requirements for Swap Dealers and Major Swap

Participants, 75 FR 81519, 81522 (Dec. 28, 2010).

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Regulation 1.4 currently provides that an FCM, IB, CPO and CTA

receiving an electronically signed document is in compliance with

Commission regulations requiring signed documents, provided that such

entity generally accepts electronic signatures.\56\ The rationale for

allowing the existing entities listed in regulation 1.4 to use

electronic signatures (i.e., ``[a]s part of [the Commission's] ongoing

efforts to facilitate the use of electronic technology and media'')

\57\ applies equally to SDs and MSPs. No commenters addressed the

amendments to regulation 1.4, and the Commission is adopting them as

proposed. Therefore, the Commission is hereby adding SDs and MSPs to

the list of entities covered by regulation 1.4 and amending its

structure to account for the provisions of the Commission's

confirmation and acknowledgement obligations discussed above.\58\

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\56\ 17 CFR 1.4. The regulation also requires that the

signatures in question comply with applicable Federal laws and

Commission regulations, and requires the relevant entity to employ

reasonable safeguards regarding the use of electronic signatures,

including safeguards against alteration of the record of the

electronic signature. Id.

\57\ Use of Electronic Signatures by Customers, Participants and

Clients of Registrants, 64 FR 47151 (Aug. 30, 1999).

\58\ This includes revision to the title of regulation 1.4 to

reflect these changes. Regulation 1.4, as amended by this release,

is entitled ``Use of electronic signatures, acknowledgments and

verifications.''

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3. Regulation 1.31: Books and Records; Keeping and Inspection

a. Record Retention Period and Inspection

To conform the existing recordkeeping requirements under regulation

1.31 to the recordkeeping requirements under proposed regulation

23.203(b) for SDs and MSPs relating to their swap transactions, the

Commission proposed to amend regulation 1.31 to require that records of

a swap transaction or related cash or forward transaction, including

records of oral communications, be kept until the termination,

maturity, expiration, transfer, assignment, or novation date of the

transaction and for five years after such date.\59\

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\59\ Certain proposed amendments to Sec. 1.35 (regarding

recording of communications), and related amendments to Sec. 1.31,

are not addressed in this final rule. The Commission intends to

address these amendments in a final rule in a separate Federal

Register release.

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CME suggested that conversations should only have to be retained

for six months after the execution of a transaction. FIA commented that

the Commission failed to provide a justification for requiring that a

swap record be maintained for the life of the swap plus five years.

Encana requested clarification that regulation 1.31 does not apply to a

non-financial end-user who enters into swaps, but is not an FCM, IB, or

member of a DCM or SEF. Encana also made a general request that the

Commission specify in its final rules which recordkeeping and reporting

rules apply to non-financial end-users.

In contrast to other commenters, Mr. Chris Barnard asserted that

all records should be kept indefinitely and scanned after two years,

arguing that there is no technological or practical reason to limit the

record retention period. Mr. Barnard specifically commented that

records of voice communications also should be

[[Page 66297]]

kept indefinitely. To support the asserted usefulness of such records,

Mr. Barnard cited a 2009 IOSCO report stating that telephone records

could benefit enforcement investigations.\60\

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\60\ http://www.iosco.org/news/pdf/IOSCONEWS137.pdf.

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The Commission also proposed to amend regulation 1.31 to conform to

the proposed regulation 23.203(b)(2) requirement for SDs and MSPs and

their swap transactions by proposing to require that all records kept

pursuant to the Act or the Commission's regulations be made available

for inspection to any applicable prudential regulator, as that term is

defined in section 1a(39) of the Act, or, in connection with security-

based swap agreements described in section 1a(47)(A)(v) of the Act, the

SEC. By contrast, existing regulation 1.31, which pertains to ``all

books and records required to be kept by the Act or by these

regulations,'' requires that records be kept for five years and be made

available only to the Commission and the Department of Justice.\61\ The

Commission did not receive comment on this proposed revision.

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\61\ 17 CFR 1.31(a) (emphasis added).

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b. Final Rule

The Commission has determined to adopt the proposed revision to

regulation 1.31 regarding record retention periods with two

modifications. First, in final regulation 1.31, the retention period

for records of oral communications leading to the execution of a swap

or related cash or forward transaction, as required of SDs and MSPs

under regulation 23.202(a)(1) and (b)1), respectively, will be one year

(rather than five years after the termination, maturity, expiration,

transfer, assignment, or novation date of the transaction, as

proposed). This modification is consistent with the final provision for

an SD's or MSP's oral communications under new regulation 23.203(b)(2)

in the Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Daily Trading Record Requirements

final rulemaking.\62\ The Commission believes that this retention

period for SDs and MSPs with respect to records of oral communications

leading to the execution of a swap or related cash or forward

transaction will enable it to adequately execute its enforcement

responsibilities under the Act and these regulations while minimizing

the storage costs imposed on these affected entities.\63\

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\62\ See Swap Dealer and Major Swap Participant Recordkeeping,

Reporting, and Duties Rules; Futures Commission Merchant and

Introducing Broker Conflicts of Interest Rules; and Chief Compliance

Officer Rules for Swap Dealers, Major Swap Participants, and Futures

Commission Merchants, 77 FR 20128, 20204 (Apr. 3, 2012) (``Provided,

however, that records of oral communications communicated by

telephone, voicemail, mobile device, or other digital or electronic

media pursuant to Sec. 23.202(a)(1) and (b)(1) shall be kept for a

period of one year.'').

\63\ As noted above, the proposed amendments to regulation 1.35

that would require the recording of certain oral communications by

certain entities in addition to SDs and MSPs will be the subject of

a separate final release. The Commission will consider any related

amendments to regulation 1.31 at that same time.

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With respect to Encana's request for clarification concerning the

applicability of regulation 1.31 to commercial end-users, regulation

1.31 applies to all records required to be kept by the Act or the

Commission's regulations, for example, records required to be kept

under regulations 1.35, 18.05 and 23.202. If these rules require end-

users to keep records (e.g., regulation 18.05, Maintenance of Books and

Records), then those records must be kept in accordance with regulation

1.31.

In response to CME's comment that although the Commission suggests

that the retention period for swaps applies only to SDs and MSPs, as

addressed in proposed regulation 23.203(b), the proposed amendment to

regulation 1.31 is ambiguous in that it could be read to apply to all

entities, the Commission clarifies that the final provision in

regulation 1.31 regarding the retention period for records of swap

transactions is triggered by the type of record and not the entity that

is required to keep the record. Therefore, although regulation

23.203(b) only applies to SDs and MSPs with regard to their swap

transactions, the final corresponding provision in regulation 1.31

applies to anyone who is required by the Act or by these regulations to

keep records of, among other things, swap transactions.\64\

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\64\ Until such time as the Commission adopts amendments to

regulation 1.35 regarding the recording of oral communications, only

SDs and MSPs are required, pursuant to regulation 23.202, to record

certain oral communications relating to swap transactions and

related cash and forward transactions. However, regulation 1.35, as

amended herein, requires certain other entities, in addition to SDs

and MSPs, to keep certain records of all transactions relating to

their business of dealing in, among other things, swap transactions.

As noted in text, regulation 1.31 as amended herein, applies to

these records.

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Second, the Commission also has determined not to adopt the

proposed revisions to regulation 1.31(a)(1), (b)(2)(ii), (b)(2)(v)(B),

(b)(3)(i), (b)(3)(ii)(C), (b)(3)(iii)(A), and (b)(4)(i) regarding the

parties to whom documents must be made available for inspection. The

proposed revisions were intended to require only SDs and MSPs to make

the records that the CEA or the Commission's regulations require them

to maintain available for inspection to, in addition to the Commission

and DOJ, any applicable prudential regulator (and, in the case of

security-based swap agreement records, to the SEC). However, as

drafted, the proposed regulation text would have applied to all persons

covered by regulation 1.31, not just to SDs and MSPs. The Commission's

final swap recordkeeping rules require SDs and MSPs to make the records

that the CEA or the Commission's regulations require them to maintain

available for inspection to, in addition to the Commission and DOJ, any

applicable prudential regulator or, in the case of security-based swap

agreements, to the SEC, capturing the intent of the proposed revisions

to regulation 1.31(a)(1), (b)(2)(ii), (b)(2)(v)(B), (b)(3)(i),

(b)(3)(ii)(C), (b)(3)(iii)(A), and (b)(4)(i).\65\ Therefore, those

proposed revisions have become superfluous. Consequently, the final

rule provides that, instead of having to make records available for

inspection to the Commission, the Department of Justice, any applicable

prudential regulator or, in the case of security-based swap agreements,

to the Securities and Exchange Commission, persons covered by

regulation 1.31 will continue to be required to make records available

for inspection only to the Commission and the Department of Justice.

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\65\ 17 CFR 23.203(b).

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c. Format of Retained Records

The Commission also proposed revising regulation 1.31(a)(1),

(a)(2), and (b) to require that: all books and records required to be

kept by the Act or by the Commission's regulations be kept in their

original form (for paper records) or native file format (for electronic

records); and production of such records be made in a form specified by

the Commission.

CME believes that the native file format requirement should not

require the retention of raw, unprocessed data generated or transmitted

by an electronic trading or clearing system. Otherwise, CME argued,

DCOs and DCMs would have to change the way they retain records. CME

stated that its recommendation is not intended to alter the type or

format of data that DCOs and DCMs currently capture and store for both

business and regulatory purposes. Rather, it asked the Commission to

clarify that the ``native file format'' provision does not impose a new

or additional recordkeeping requirement on DCOs and DCMs as it relates

to their electronic trading or clearing systems.

[[Page 66298]]

CME also asked for clarification as to which proposed revisions to

regulation 1.31 apply only to swaps. MGEX sought clarification that

proposed regulation 1.31 does not require a firm to keep both paper and

electronic records concerning the same communications.

CME commented that the original form requirement is confusing and

superfluous in light of current regulation 1.31(b), which permits the

storage of paper records on microfilm, microfiche, or a similar medium,

and that it is not clear what the Commission means by ``native file

format.'' Similarly, NFA requested clarification that regulation

1.31(b) would continue to permit firms to retain paper records on

micrographic or electronic storage media in lieu of maintaining paper

records in their original format. NFA commented that the proposed

revisions fail to provide a reason for requiring that electronic

records be kept in their native file format.

FIA and NFA believe that existing regulation 1.31 complies with

Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 34. Therefore, they asserted, there is

no reason for the Commission to require that records be kept in their

original form for paper records and native file format for electronic

records. FIA and NFA further asserted that there is no reason for the

Commission to depart from a rule that was designed, in 1999, to

harmonize with the SEC's recordkeeping rules. Similarly, ACSA commented

that requiring paper records to be maintained in their original form

for five years and be readily accessible for the first two would

conflict with SEC rules. FIA commented that firms currently rely on

regulation 1.31(b) to transfer electronic records from their original

format to new forms of electronic media. CME similarly commented that

electronic files often must be migrated, upgraded or converted in order

to meet ever-evolving technology standards. Therefore, CME argued that,

because some swaps could exist for 30 to 50 years, the technology used

to generate or store electronic records related to such swap

transactions may become outdated or obsolete in a much shorter period

of time. Therefore, CME recommended that the Commission eliminate the

requirement to retain swap records in their native file format for the

life of the swap.

CME argued that the Commission should re-propose other rules

referencing regulation 1.31 (e.g., DCO Core Principles, DCM Core

Principles, SEF Core Principles, and SD and MSP Recordkeeping) because

the proposed revisions to the form a record must take under regulation

1.31 substantially change the requirements proposed by those

rulemakings. In contrast to other comments, the Working Group, in

response to the proposed regulation 23.203(b) requiring SDs and MSPs to

maintain records in accordance with existing regulation 1.31, asserted

that, to be made workable for purposes of complying with the

Commission's proposed requirements under regulation 23.203(b),

regulation 1.31 should be revised to reflect current technologies and

industry practices relating to digitized data storage.\66\

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\66\ See Letter of Working Group of Commercial Energy Firms,

dated February 7, 2011, in response to Notice of Proposed Rulemaking

for Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Daily Trading Requirements for

Swap Dealers and Major Swap Participants (75 FR 76666, Dec. 9,

2010). The Commission addressed the Working Group's comment in the

final rule for SD and MSP recordkeeping requirements stating,

``[t]he Commission believes that The Working Group's concerns about

Sec. 1.31 have been addressed by a subsequent rule proposal to

amend Sec. 1.31 to reflect current technologies and industry

practices related to digitized data storage. If these amendments are

finalized, the Commission believes that Sec. 1.31 will be

compatible with electronic records in a trading system and other

records that do not originate from a written document.'' See Swap

Dealer and Major Swap Participant Recordkeeping, Reporting, and

Duties Rules; Futures Commission Merchant and Introducing Broker

Conflicts of Interest Rules; and Chief Compliance Officer Rules for

Swap Dealers, Major Swap Participants, and Futures Commission

Merchants, 77 FR 20128, 20134 (Apr. 3, 2012).

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Having considered these comments, the Commission is adopting the

revisions to regulation 1.31 regarding the form in which records must

be kept as proposed. In 1999, as commenters highlighted, the Commission

adopted amendments to the recordkeeping obligations established in

regulation 1.31 by, among other things, allowing most categories of

records to be stored on either micrographic or electronic storage media

for the full five-year maintenance period.\67\ The Commission reasserts

one of its intentions in undertaking the 1999 update, which was to

``provide recordkeepers with opportunities to reduce costs and improve

both the efficiency and security of their recordkeeping systems.''

Thus, the Commission clarifies that recordkeepers will be in compliance

with the new requirement to keep paper records in their original form

if they continue to store paper records ``on either `micrographic

media' * * * or `electronic storage media' for the required time

period,'' as provided under regulation 1.31(b). However, one of the

Commission's other stated goals in amending regulation 1.31 in 1999 was

to further the Commission's need for access to complete and accurate

records when necessary in a format that the Commission can process,

i.e., a usable format.\68\ Thus, the Commission is now making clear

that paper records are not usable by the Commission as a substitute for

the underlying financial data used to create that paper. Therefore, it

is necessary that electronic records be maintained in their native file

format and not reduced to paper.

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\67\ See 64 FR 28735 (May 27, 1999).

\68\ In 1999, the Commission stated that, ``[t]he requirement

that recordkeepers provide documents to the Commission in one of the

many identified formats arises out of practical limitations on the

Commission's ability to process data stored in the full range of

available formats and coding structures on the full range of storage

media available to recordkeepers.'' 64 FR 28735, 28740 (May 27,

1999).

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Accordingly, for records that include data stored in a database,

the ``native file format'' is the format in which the data is

maintained in that database, not a format reduced to paper or imaged

format, which is essentially the equivalent of paper. This is true

regardless of the imaged format, such as portable document format

(``PDF''), whether machine-readable through optical character

recognition (``OCR'') or any other process. Thus, the underlying

financial data from which an FCM creates PDF versions of customer

account statements must be kept in its ``native file format'' because,

if and when the Commission requests those financial records, it will

not be sufficient for the recordkeeper to produce the paper and/or PDF

statements. Where the data is used to generate a paper document

(including, but not limited to a PDF), such as a customer account

statement, the paper document must be maintained in its original form,

while the data must be maintained in its native file format.

Specifically regarding records of swap transactions, the Commission

has decided to keep the requirement that these records be maintained in

their native file format for the life of the swap plus five years. In

response to CME's specific concerns about the need to migrate, update

or convert electronic files over the potentially long life of a swap to

meet evolving technology standards, the Commission confirms that

maintaining data in native file format (i.e., the format in which it

was originally created or maintained) does not prohibit a recordkeeper

from migrating that data from an obsolete or legacy system or database

to a new system or database, where it will then be maintained in the

native file format of the new system or database. If due to the

proprietary nature of the system, it is impossible or impracticable to

provide the Commission with the data in its native file format because,

for

[[Page 66299]]

example, the native file format would not be accessible by the

Commission, as it may not otherwise have that proprietary system, or

the system does not readily export the requested data in native file

format, then a recordkeeper may provide the data in a commonly

accessible, non-proprietary format.

In the proposed changes to regulation 1.31, the Commission proposed

to amend regulation 1.31(b)(3)(i) by replacing ``approved machine-

readable media as defined in regulation 15.00(l)'' with ``compatible

data processing media as defined in regulation 15.00(d).'' The proposed

change was intended to update this paragraph of regulation 1.31 to

reflect that regulation 15.00(l) no longer exists and, when it existed,

was a definition of ``compatible data processing media'' and not

``machine-readable media.'' \69\ Having received no comments on this

proposed ministerial change, the Commission has determined to adopt the

changes to regulation 1.31(b)(3)(i) as proposed.

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\69\ Under current Sec. 15.00(d), ``Compatible data processing

media'' means ``data processing media approved by the Commission or

its designee.'' This term has existed under Sec. 15.00 since as

early as 1986. See 17 CFR 15.01 (1986). At that time, the definition

included a list of what the Commission considered to be compatible

data processing media, but deleted those references to specific

media in 1997 in response to comments suggesting that a regulatory

definition was impractical given the fast pace of evolving

technology. See 64 FR 28735, 28739 (May 27, 1999) (citing 62 FR

24026, 24028 (May 2, 1997)).

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In response to CME's request for clarification of the scope of

``native file format,'' the Commission confirms that the definition of

``native file format'' excludes raw, unprocessed data generated or

transmitted by an electronic trading or clearing system.

4. Regulation 1.33: Monthly and Confirmation Statements

Regulation 1.33 requires FCMs to maintain certain records and to

regularly furnish monthly and confirmation statements to customers

regarding commodity futures and option transactions they have entered

into on behalf of customers. The DFA amended the definition of FCM in

section 1a of the CEA to authorize an FCM to solicit or accept orders

for swaps in addition to commodity futures and option transactions.\70\

Therefore, the Commission proposed adding requirements for monthly and

confirmation statements applicable to swaps. The Commission did not

receive comments concerning these amendments and is adopting these

provisions mostly as proposed.

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\70\ DFA section 721(a)(13). Today's rulemaking similarly

incorporates those changes into the corresponding definition of

``futures commission merchant'' in regulation 1.3.

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The Commission has decided to replace a reference to ``open

positions'' in the existing paragraph (a) introductory text with ``open

contracts.'' This amendment makes the regulation 1.33(a) introductory

text consistent with the Commission's revised definition of ``open

contracts'' in regulation 1.3(t).

In finalizing paragraphs (a)(3) and (b)(2), the Commission is

replacing proposed references to ``swaps'' with ``Cleared Swaps,'' as

regulation 22.1 defines that term. Since the publication of the

Proposal, the Commission has finalized part 22 concerning the

segregation of ``Cleared Swaps Customer Collateral.'' \71\ Because an

FCM will only clear those swaps that are ``Cleared Swaps,'' regulation

1.33 should only refer to ``Cleared Swaps.'' For the same reason, the

Commission is using the terms ``Cleared Swaps Customer'' and ``Cleared

Swaps Customer Collateral,'' as now defined in regulation 1.3. These

corrections are being made in conjunction with technical corrections

described below, in section II.A.14 (Technical corrections to parts 1

and 22).

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\71\ Protection of Cleared Swaps Customer Contracts and

Collateral; Conforming Amendments to the Commodity Broker Bankruptcy

Provisions, 77 FR 6336 (Feb. 7, 2012). See infra pt. II.A.14

(discussing technical changes to parts 1 and 22).

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Finally, in paragraph (a)(3) of regulation 1.33, the Commission is

replacing the phrase ``caused to be executed by'' with ``carried by.''

The reason is that an FCM might not provide a trade execution function

for every swap that it clears.

5. Regulation 1.35: Records of Cash Commodity, Futures and Option

Transactions \72\

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\72\ The Commission proposed to amend regulation 1.35(a) so that

FCMs, RFEDs, IBs, and members of a DCM or SEF would be required to

record all oral and written communications provided or received

concerning quotes, solicitations, bids, offers, instructions,

trading, and prices, that lead to the execution of transactions in a

commodity interest or cash commodity, however communicated. The

proposed amendments to regulation 1.35(a) also included a

requirement that each transaction record be maintained in a separate

electronic file identifiably by transaction and counterparty. As

noted above, the Commission will consider these proposed amendments

to regulation 1.35(a) in a separate release.

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As part of the ministerial amendments contained in this release,

the Commission is renumbering portions of regulation 1.35 so that

paragraphs currently numbered 1.35(a-1) and 1.35(a-2) will be

renumbered 1.35(b) and 1.35(c), respectively. As a result, paragraphs

currently numbered 1.35(b), (c), (d) and (e) have been renumbered as

1.35(d), (e), (f) and (g), respectively.

Because amended regulation 1.35 extends recordkeeping obligations

to swaps, the Commission has created special language for swaps, where

appropriate. In regulation 1.35(d)(2) (formerly (b)(2)) (records of

futures, commodity options, and retail forex exchange transactions for

each account), the Commission has added paragraph (iv), as proposed.

The Commission did not receive comments about this amendment and is

adopting it as proposed. Amended regulation 1.35(d)(2)(iv) requires

FCMs, IBs, and any clearing members clearing swaps executed on a DCM or

SEF to maintain records describing the date, price, quantity, market,

commodity, and, if cleared, DCO of each swap.

a. Bunched Orders

The Commission recognizes that investment managers currently

execute bunched swap orders on behalf of clients and allocate the

trades to individual clients post-execution. The Commission believes

that the bunched order procedures currently applicable to futures can

be adapted for use in swap trading. Therefore, the Commission proposed

amending regulation 1.35(a-1)(5) (redesignated as (b)(5) pursuant to

this rulemaking), addressing post-execution allocation of bunched

orders.\73\ The Commission received one comment letter concerning this

topic. The Swaps and Derivatives Market Association (``SDMA'') strongly

supported the proposed amendment on the grounds that it would promote

operational and execution efficiency in both the cleared and uncleared

swaps markets. Specifically, SDMA noted that industry precedent

supports the proposed post-execution time limits (for cleared swaps, no

later than a time sufficiently before the end of the calendar day the

order is executed to ensure that clearing records identify the ultimate

customer for each trade; for uncleared swaps, no later than the end of

the day the swap was executed). SDMA also noted that regulation 1.35(a-

1)(5)'s bunched order provisions for futures provide an appropriate

model for swaps and that FCMs generally have sufficient risk control

capability (technologically speaking) to allocate swap orders post-

execution.

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\73\ In the Proposal, the Commission requested comment as to

whether it would be appropriate to add FCMs and IBs to the list of

eligible account managers. Proposing Release, 76 FR at 33073.

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In its final rulemaking concerning Customer Clearing Documentation,

Time of Acceptance for Clearing, and Clearing Member Risk Management,

the Commission adopted the Proposal's

[[Page 66300]]

amendments to regulation 1.35(a-1)(5) concerning the post-execution

time limits referred to above.\74\

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\74\ Customer Clearing Documentation, Time of Acceptance for

Clearing, and Clearing Member Risk Management, 77 FR 21278, 21306

(Apr. 9, 2012).

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In this rulemaking, the Commission is adding FCMs and IBs to the

list of eligible account managers in regulation 1.35(a-1)(5)

(redesignated as (b)(5)), as proposed, in order to have a single

standard for all intermediaries that might have discretion over

customer accounts. Unlike other account managers, however, under

regulations 155.3 and 155.4, FCMs and IBs are prohibited from including

proprietary trades in a bunched order with customer trades.

Accordingly, as proposed, the Commission has added a cross-reference in

regulation 1.35(a-1)(5) (re-designated herein as (b)(5)) to those

regulations. The Commission did not receive comments to this segment of

the Proposal.

The Commission is further amending regulation 1.35(a-1)

(redesignated herein as (b)) in order to provide that specific customer

account identifiers need not be included in confirmations or

acknowledgments provided pursuant to regulation 23.501(a), if the

requirements of regulation 1.35(a-1)(5) (redesignated herein as (b)(5))

are met. This will enable account managers to bunch orders for trades

executed bilaterally with SDs or MSPs. This will require that, similar

to the current procedure for futures, the allocation be completed by

the end of the day of execution and provided to the counterparty. The

Commission is making this revision as proposed; it did not receive

comments to this revision.

Also as proposed, the Commission is deleting appendix C to part 1,

which predated regulation 1.35(a-1)(5) (re-designated herein as (b)(5))

and also addresses bunched orders. Appendix C consists of a Commission

Interpretation regarding certain account identification requirements

pertaining to the practice of combining orders for different accounts

into a single order book, referred to as bunched orders. The procedures

for bunched orders are set forth in regulation 1.35(a-1)(5) (re-

designated herein as (b)(5)). Accordingly, the procedures under

appendix C to part 1 are duplicative and no longer necessary. The

Commission received no comments concerning its proposal to delete

appendix C to part 1 and is hereby deleting that appendix.

b. Other Changes to Regulation 1.35

The Commission has deleted paragraphs (f)-(l) of regulation 1.35,

as proposed. To implement the CFMA, regulation 38.2 required DCMs to

comply with an enumerated list of Commission regulations, and exempted

them from all remaining Commission regulations that were no longer

applicable post-CFMA.\75\ The DCM Core Principles final rulemaking

substantially revised part 38, but did not revoke regulation 38.2.\76\

Instead, it updated the list of Commission regulations that are

applicable to DCMs. Unlike its predecessor, regulation 38.2, as revised

by the DCM Core Principles final rulemaking, only enumerates the

Commission regulations from which DCMs are exempt.

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\75\ See 71 FR 1964 (Jan. 12, 2006).

\76\ Core Principles and Other Requirements for Designated

Contract Markets, 77 FR 36612 (June 19, 2012).

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As part of the ministerial amendments contained in this rulemaking,

the Commission has eliminated from the Commission's regulations any

provisions that have been inapplicable to DCMs since the passage of the

CFMA, and that remain inapplicable after the passage of the DFA.

Paragraphs (f)-(l) of regulation 1.35 are among those provisions.

Pursuant to the deletion paragraph (j) of regulation 1.35, the

Commission has copied most of that provision into new subsection

(d)(7)(i) (formerly (b)(7)(i)). The Commission made these changes as

proposed; it did not receive any comments on these provisions.

Also as part of the ministerial amendments contained in this

rulemaking, the Commission proposed to eliminate regulations 1.35(a-

1)(3)(ii) and 1.35(a-2)(3). However, regulation 38.2, as revised by the

DCM Core Principles final rule, no longer exempts DCMs from these

provisions. Accordingly, these provisions will not be eliminated in

this rulemaking, and they are redesignated as regulations

1.35(b)(3)(ii) and 1.35(c)(3), respectively.

Regulation 1.35, as revised by this rulemaking, no longer agrees

with regulation 38.2. As this rulemaking eliminates the provisions of

regulation 1.35 that remain inapplicable to DCMs, the Commission is

revising regulation 38.2 to remove references to those provisions of

regulation 1.35 with which DCMs are not required to comply. The

Commission considers this revision to regulation 38.2 technical in

nature as it merely cleans up the discrepancy created by the revisions

to regulation 1.35.

Finally, the Commission has made a technical correction to

regulation 1.35(b)(3)(v) (redesignated herein as (d)(3)(v)) so that the

final sentence references ``commodity futures, retail forex, commodity

option, or swap books and records'' instead of ``commodity retail forex

or commodity option books and records.'' The Commission has made this

change as proposed; it did not receive any comments on this provision.

6. Regulation 1.37: Customer's or Option Customer's Name, Address, and

Occupation Recorded; Record of Guarantor or Controller of Account

Dodd-Frank Act section 723(a)(3) added a new section 2(h)(8) to the

CEA to require, among other things, that swaps subject to the clearing

requirement of CEA section 2(h)(1) be executed either on a DCM or on a

SEF. The DFA established SEFs as a new category of regulated markets

for the purpose of trading and executing swaps. Because SEFs are now

regulated markets under the CEA, many of the Commission's existing

regulatory provisions that currently are applicable to DCMs also will

become applicable to SEFs.

Accordingly, the Commission, as proposed, has amended paragraphs

(c) and (d) of regulation 1.37, pertaining to recording foreign

traders' and guarantors' names, addresses, and business information.

Currently, these provisions apply to DCMs and futures and options

contracts executed on those facilities. This revision amends the

provisions to also include SEFs and swap transactions. Additionally,

the Commission is amending the title and remaining text of regulation

1.37 to reflect the removal of the term ``option customer.'' \77\ The

Commission received no comments on these provisions.

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\77\ See supra, section II.A.b. for a discussion of the deletion

of the defined term ``option customer'' (1.3(jj)).

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7. Regulation 1.39: Simultaneous Buying and Selling Orders of Different

Principals; Execution of, for and Between Principals

Like regulation 1.37, the Commission is amending regulation 1.39 to

apply it to SEFs and swaps. Regulation 1.39, which has applied to

members of contract markets, governs the simultaneous execution of buy

and sell orders of different principals for the same commodity for

future delivery by a member and permits the execution of such orders

between such principals on a contract market. The Commission is

amending this provision to include members of SEFs, and to include swap

transactions. The Commission is also amending paragraph (c) to

eliminate the reference to ``cross trades,'' as they are

[[Page 66301]]

no longer defined under section 4c(a) of the Act, as amended by the

DFA. The Commission received no comments and is making these revisions

as proposed, with a slight modification to further clarify that the

rule applies to SEFs in the same manner that it applies to DCMs.

8. Regulation 1.40: Crop, Market Information Letters, Reports; Copies

Required

Regulation 1.40 requires FCMs, RFEDs, IBs and members of contract

markets to furnish to the Commission certain information they publish

or circulate concerning crop or market information affecting prices of

commodities. The Commission is amending regulation 1.40 to apply it to

trading on a SEF, to the extent that persons have trading privileges on

the SEF. Persons without trading privileges on a SEF will not be

subject to regulation 1.40. The amendments also update the forms of

communication covered by the regulation by replacing the word

``telegram'' with ``telecommunication.'' The Commission is making these

revisions as proposed; the Commission received no comments on these

provisions.

9. Regulation 1.59: Activities of Self-Regulatory Employees, Governing

Board Members, Committee Members and Consultants

The Commission proposed to amend regulation 1.59 to include SEFs

and swaps. The Commission also proposed to amend regulation 1.59(b) to

correct certain cross-references to the Act and Commission regulations.

Regulation 1.59(c) has been revised to apply only to registered futures

associations, as the prohibitions contained therein applicable to the

other SROs already are addressed in proposed regulation 40.9.\78\ The

Commission is making these revisions as proposed; the Commission

received no comments.

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\78\ Requirements for Derivatives Clearing Organizations,

Designated Contract Markets, and Swap Execution Facilities Regarding

the Mitigation of Conflicts of Interest, 75 FR 63732 (Oct. 18,

2010).

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10. Regulation 1.63: Service on Self-Regulatory Organization Governing

Boards or Committees by Persons With Disciplinary Histories

The Commission proposed to amend regulation 1.63 to correct certain

cross-references to the Act and its regulations. The Commission also

proposed to amend paragraph (d) to incorporate the posting of notices

required under that paragraph on each SRO's Web site. The Commission

received no comments regarding the proposed amendments to regulation

1.63 and is adopting the amendments without modification.

11. Regulation 1.67: Notification of Final Disciplinary Action

Involving Financial Harm to a Customer

Regulation 1.67 requires contract markets, upon taking any final

disciplinary action involving a member causing financial harm to a non-

member, to provide notice to the FCM that cleared the transaction. FCMs

and other registrants on SEFs should also be notified of any

disciplinary action involving transactions on a SEF they executed for

ECPs. Accordingly, the Commission proposed to amend regulation 1.67 to

include SEFs, registrants and ECPs on such facilities. The Commission

received no comments regarding proposed regulation 1.67 and is adopting

the rule without modification.

12. Regulation 1.68: Customer Election Not To Have Funds, Carried by a

Futures Commission Merchant for Trading on a Registered Derivatives

Transaction Execution Facility, Separately Accounted for and Segregated

The Commission is hereby removing and reserving regulation 1.68.

Regulation 1.68 had permitted a customer of an FCM to allow the FCM to

not separately account for and segregate such customer's funds if,

among other things, such funds are being carried by the FCM to trade on

or through the facilities of a DTEF. No DTEF has ever registered with

the Commission. Furthermore, section 734 of the Dodd-Frank Act repealed

the DTEF provisions in the CEA, effective July 15, 2011. Therefore,

because the statutory provisions underpinning regulation 1.68 have been

repealed, the Commission is removing it from the Commission's

regulations.\79\

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\79\ The Commission is also hereby deleting all other references

to DTEFs, except those already removed by other Commission

rulemakings, throughout its regulations. See infra Part II.G.

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13. Regulations 1.44, 1.53, and 1.62--Deletion of Regulations

Inapplicable to Designated Contract Markets

The CFMA adopted core principles for DCMs.\80\ On August 10, 2001,

the Commission published final rules implementing provisions of the

CFMA, in which it concluded that the CFMA's framework effectively

constituted a broad exemption from many of the existing regulations

applicable to DCMs.\81\ Accordingly, the final rules included

regulation 38.2, which required DCMs to comply with an enumerated list

of Commission regulations, and exempted them from all remaining

Commission regulations no longer applicable post-CFMA. As part of the

ministerial amendments contained in the Proposal, the Commission

proposed to eliminate from the Commission's regulations any provisions

that have been inapplicable to DCMs since the CFMA was enacted and that

remain inapplicable after enactment of the DFA. Accordingly, the

Commission proposed to eliminate the following regulations: regulation

1.44 (Records and reports of warehouses, depositories, and other

similar entities; visitation of premises), regulation 1.53 (Enforcement

of contract market bylaws, rules, regulations, and resolutions), and

regulation 1.62 (Contract market requirement for floor broker and floor

trader registration). The Commission received no comments regarding the

proposed deletion of these provisions and is hereby deleting such

provisions as proposed.

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\80\ Public Law 106-554, 114 Stat. 2763 (2000).

\81\ A New Regulatory Framework for Trading Facilities,

Intermediaries and Clearing Organizations, 66 FR 42256 (Aug. 10,

2001).

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14. Technical Changes to Part 1 and Part 22 in Order To Accommodate

Recently Finalized Part 22

On February 7, 2012, the Commission finalized regulations in part

22 regarding the Protection of Cleared Swaps Customer Contracts and

Collateral (``Cleared Swaps Customer Final Rule'').\82\ The Cleared

Swaps Customer Final Rule took effect on April 9, 2012, although the

compliance date for the rule is November 8, 2012. The Cleared Swaps

Customer Final Rule established a segregation regime applicable to FCMs

and DCOs for ``Cleared Swaps Customer Collateral,'' as regulation 22.1

defines that term.\83\ The rulemaking process involved extensive public

comment, including through both an advanced notice of proposed

rulemaking and a notice of proposed rulemaking.

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\82\ Protection of Cleared Swaps Customer Contracts and

Collateral; Conforming Amendments to the Commodity Broker Bankruptcy

Provisions, 77 FR 6336 (Feb. 7, 2012) (``Cleared Swaps Customer

Final Rule'').

\83\ Part 22 capitalizes definitions, but part 1 does not.

Hence, in this rulemaking, terms defined in regulation 22.1 are

capitalized, and terms defined in regulation 1.3 are not.

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The Cleared Swaps Customer Final Rule carefully established the

basic architecture for protecting Cleared Swaps Customer Collateral.

Both the Cleared Swaps Customer Final Rule and

[[Page 66302]]

the related proposed rule \84\ described how and to what extent the

part 22 regulations for cleared swaps parallel and deviate from the

part 1 regulations applicable to FCMs and DCOs relating to Customers'

Money, Securities, and Property for exchange-traded contracts (referred

to herein as the ``Part 1 Segregation Regulations''). In today's final

rulemaking, the Commission is making technical corrections to certain

of the Part 1 Segregation Regulations to make unambiguous that certain

parallel Part 1 Segregation Regulations do not apply to Cleared Swaps

Customer Collateral. These Part 1 Segregation Regulations only apply to

the segregation of customer funds used to margin, guarantee, or secure

contracts for future delivery on or subject to the rules of a contract

market, and all money accruing to such customers as a result of such

contracts (referred to herein as ``futures contracts''), as well as to

customer funds used to margin commodity option transactions on or

subject to the rules of a contract market or DCO (referred to herein as

``options on futures contracts'').\85\

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\84\ Protection of Cleared Swaps Customer Contracts and

Collateral; Conforming Amendments to the Commodity Broker Bankruptcy

Provisions, 76 FR 33818 (June 9, 2011).

\85\ See generally Cleared Swaps Customer Final Rule, 77 FR at

6363 (``Sections 22.2 through 22.10 implement the basic architecture

of a system of segregation for swaps customer funds roughly

comparable to the system used for customer funds for futures

contracts under CEA sections 4d(a)(2) and 4d(b) and Commission

regulations 1.20 through 1.30 and 1.49.'').

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For the reasons stated above, the Commission is hereby making the

following technical corrections:

In regulation 1.3, the Commission has added a definition of

``futures customer funds'' to reference only those funds used to margin

futures contracts or commodity option transactions on or subject to the

rules of a contract market, or DCO, as the case may be. This definition

matches the existing definition of customer funds (regulation 1.3(gg)).

The Commission is also adding a definition of ``Cleared Swaps Customer

Collateral,'' which cross-references regulation 22.1's definition of

this term. Regulation 1.3(gg)(``customer funds'') applies to both

``futures customer funds'' and ``Cleared Swaps Customer Collateral.''

The Proposal's definition in regulation 1.3(gg) had already applied to

customer funds used to margin both futures and swaps.

Relatedly, the Commission is adding a definition of ``futures

customer'' to regulation 1.3 and a definition of ``Cleared Swaps

Customer,'' which cross-references regulation 22.1's definition of that

term. As discussed above in section II.A.1.b. of this preamble, the

definition of ``customer'' in regulation 1.3(k) will be finalized as

proposed, to reference ``any person who uses a futures commission

merchant, introducing broker, commodity trading advisor, or commodity

pool operator as an agent in connection with trading in any commodity

interest.'' \86\ The definition of ``customer'' refers to both a

``futures customer'' and a ``Cleared Swaps Customer'' because, as

described in section II.A.1.f. of this preamble, this rulemaking is

adopting a revised definition of ``commodity interest'' (regulation

1.3(yy)), largely as proposed, to reference futures, swaps, and

contracts subject to Commission sections 2(c)(2), 4c or 19 of the Act.

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\86\ As finalized, the definition of customer in regulation

1.3(k) preserves existing treatment of proprietary accounts.

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The Proposal included an amendment to the definition of ``futures

account'' in regulation 1.3(vv) to reference a related futures

segregation provision of section 4 of the Act, as amended by the Dodd-

Frank Act, i.e., section 4d(a). The Proposal neglected to reference

subsection (b) of section 4d, so today's final definition of ``futures

account'' references sections 4d(a) and 4d(b) of the Act. The

Commission did not receive comments about its proposed revisions to

this definition. As a technical correction, the Commission is adding a

definition of ``Cleared Swaps Customer Account,'' which references

regulation 22.1's definition of that term. Relatedly, the Commission is

adding a definition of ``customer account'' in regulation 1.3 to

connote both a ``futures account'' and a ``Cleared Swaps Customer

Account,'' as regulation 1.3 defines each of those terms.

The Commission is making a technical correction to paragraph

(c)(5)(xiii)(C) of regulation 1.17 (``Minimum financial requirements

for futures commission merchants and introducing brokers'') to restrict

a provision pertaining to a foreign broker granted relief pursuant to

regulation 30.10 to ``the foreign futures or foreign options secured

amount, as Sec. 1.3(rr) of this part defines such term.'' This

provision has always referenced the foreign futures or foreign options

secured amount. Thus, because ``customer funds'' includes both

``futures customer funds'' and ``Cleared Swaps Customer Collateral,''

the Commission is making a technical correction to replace the term

``customer funds'' in paragraph (c)(5)(xiii)(C) of regulation 1.17 with

the term ``foreign futures or foreign options secured amount.''

The Commission is making technical corrections to regulation 1.20

(``Customer funds to be segregated and separately accounted for'') by:

changing the title to ``Futures customer funds to be segregated and

separately account for''; replacing references to ``customer funds''

and ``customers'' to ``futures customer funds'' and ``futures

customers''; and linking the regulation to those provisions of section

4d of the Act, as amended by the Dodd-Frank Act, pertaining to the

segregation of futures customer funds (i.e., sections 4d(a) and (b)).

The Commission is making technical corrections to regulation 1.21

(``Care of money and equities accruing to customers'') by changing the

title to ``Care of money and equities accruing to futures customer''

and replacing references to ``customer'' with references to ``futures

customer.'' The Cleared Swaps Customer Final Rule did not create a

parallel regulation in part 22 on the grounds that such parallels were

not necessary because: (1) Regulation 22.1 broadly includes

``accruals'' in the definition of Cleared Swaps Customer Collateral,

and (2) regulation 22.2(e) permits an FCM to commingle the Cleared

Swaps Customer Collateral of multiple Cleared Swaps Customers. Thus,

although revised regulation 1.21 is limited to futures customers and

there is no parallel regulation in part 22, part 22 captures the

substance of regulation 1.21 with respect to Cleared Swaps Customers

and Cleared Swaps Customer Collateral.

The Commission is making technical corrections to regulation 1.22

(``Use of customer funds restricted'') by changing the title to ``Use

of futures customer funds restricted'' and replacing references to

``customer funds'' and ``customer'' with references to ``futures

customer funds'' and ``futures customer.'' The Cleared Swaps Customer

Final Rule incorporated these requirements into part 22 with respect to

Cleared Swaps Customer Collateral and Cleared Swaps Customers.

The Commission is making technical corrections to regulation 1.23

(``Interest of futures commission merchant in funds; additions and

withdrawals'') by changing the title to ``Interest of futures

commission merchant in segregated futures customer funds; additions and

withdrawals;'' replacing references to ``customer funds'' and

``customer'' with references to ``futures customer funds'' and

``futures customer;'' and linking the regulation to sections 4d(a) and

(b) of the Act.\87\

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\87\ The Cleared Swaps Customer Final Rule created analogous

requirements in part 22 with respect to Cleared Swaps Customer

Collateral and Cleared Swaps Customers. See 17 CFR 22.2(e)(3).

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[[Page 66303]]

The Commission is making technical corrections to regulation 1.24

(``Segregated funds; exclusions therefrom'') by replacing a reference

to ``customers'' with ``futures customers.'' \88\

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\88\ The Cleared Swaps Customer Final Rule created analogous

provisions in part 22 with respect to Cleared Swaps Customers. See

17 CFR 22.2(d)(3).

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The Commission is making technical corrections to regulation 1.26

(``Deposit of instruments purchased with customer funds'') by: changing

the title to ``Deposit of instruments purchased with futures customer

funds''; replacing references to ``customer funds'' and ``customer''

with references to ``futures customer funds'' and ``futures customer;''

and linking the regulation to sections 4d(a) and (b) of the Act.\89\

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\89\ The Cleared Swaps Customer Final Rule created analogous

requirements in regulation 22.5 17 CFR 22.5.

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The Commission is making technical corrections to regulation 1.32

(``Segregated account; daily computation and record'') by replacing

references to ``customer funds,'' ``customer,'' and ``customer

account'' with references to ``futures customer funds,'' ``futures

customer,'' and ``futures customer account.'' \90\

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\90\ The Cleared Swaps Customer Final Rule mirrored some of

regulation 1.32's requirements in part 22 with respect to Cleared

Swaps Customer Collateral and Cleared Swaps Customers. See 17 CFR

22.2(g).

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The Commission is making a technical correction to regulations

1.21, 1.23, 1.24, 1.26, 1.29, 140.735-2a, and 140.735-3 by replacing

the term ``clearing organization'' or ``clearinghouse'' with

``derivatives clearing organization.'' Since Congress' enactment of the

CFMA in 2000,\91\ which added ``derivatives clearing organization'' as

a new defined term to section 1a of the Act, the intent of these

regulations has been to refer to ``derivatives clearing

organizations.''

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\91\ Public Law 106-55, 114 Stat. 2763 (Effective December 21,

2000).

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The Commission is making technical changes to subsection (1)(iii)

of regulation 1.33 (``Monthly and Confirmation statements'') to

specifically reference ``futures customer funds'' and the ``foreign

futures and foreign options secured amount.'' This subsection presently

refers to these classes of customer funds; the intention of this

technical amendment is to clarify that meaning.

Proposed amended regulation 1.33(a)(3) described what ``swap

positions'' information an FCM must provide in monthly statements to

its customers. The Commission did not receive comments on this proposal

and is publishing it as proposed, except for the following. In line

with the aforementioned technical corrections, today's final version of

regulation 1.33 replaces ``swap position'' with ``Cleared Swaps

Customer.'' Today's final rulemaking also makes a technical correction

to regulation 1.33 by combining subsections (a)(1)(iv), (a)(2)(v), and

proposed (a)(3)(iv) into a new paragraph (a)(4).

Unlike the aforementioned Part 1 Segregation Regulations,

Regulation 1.25 (``Investment of customer funds''), on the other hand,

now properly applies to both futures customer funds and Cleared Swaps

Customer Collateral. Thus, its title will continue to refer to

``customer funds,'' which, as defined by revised regulation 1.3(gg),

includes both futures customer funds and Cleared Swaps Customer

Collateral. However, the Commission is making technical corrections to

regulation 1.25 as part of today's final rulemaking by adding

references to regulation 22.5 (``Futures commission merchants and

derivatives clearing organizations: Written acknowledgment'') alongside

current references to regulation 1.26 (``Deposit of instruments

purchased with customer funds'') (to be amended herein as ``Deposit of

instruments purchased with futures customer funds''). The Commission

explains this reference to regulation 22.5 in a new provision at the

end of paragraph (d)(13) of regulation 1.25.

The foregoing technical corrections to the Part 1 Segregation

Regulations are designed to ensure that, when taken together with the

Cleared Swaps Customer Final Rule, they do not create redundant, and

potentially conflicting, duties for FCMs and DCOs. For similar reasons,

the Commission is making certain equivalent technical corrections to

part 22. As mentioned above, none of these technical changes alter the

meaning of any regulation of part 22. First, the Commission is deleting

the definition of ``Customer'' from regulation 22.1 (``Definitions'').

Because of the aforementioned addition of the definition of ``futures

customer'' in regulation 1.3, regulation 22.1's definition of

``Customer'' is no longer needed or correct. Consequently, in

regulation 22.2 (``Futures Commission Merchants: Treatment of Cleared

Swaps and Associated Cleared Swaps Customer Collateral''), the

Commission is replacing references to ``Customers'' with references to

``futures customers'' or ``foreign futures or foreign options

customers,'' as regulation 30.1(c) defines that term. For the same

reason, in regulation 22.3(b)(2)(iii) (``Derivatives clearing

organizations: Treatment of Cleared Swaps Customer Collateral'');

paragraphs (a) and (b) of regulation 22.5 (``Futures commission

merchants and derivatives clearing organizations: Written

acknowledgement''); and paragraph (a) of regulation 22.9

(``Denomination of Cleared Swaps Customer Collateral and location of

depositories''), the Commission is replacing references to funds

belonging to ``Customers'' with references to ``futures customer

funds.''

In addition, since, as described above, regulation 1.25

(``Investment of customer funds'') applies to both futures customer

funds and Cleared Swaps Customer Collateral, the Commission is making a

technical correction to paragraph (e)(1) of regulation 22.2 and

paragraph (d) of regulation 22.3 by omitting, ``which section shall

apply to such money, securities, or other property as if they comprised

customer funds or customer money subject to segregation pursuant to

section 4d(a) of the Act and the regulations thereunder.''

Similarly, the Commission is making a technical correction to

regulation 22.9 (``Denomination of Cleared Swaps Customer Collateral

and location of depositories'') by omitting a reference to Cleared

Swaps Customer Collateral. Regulation 22.9 cross-references regulation

1.49 (``Denomination of customer funds and location of depositories'').

Because the new revised definition of ``customer funds'' in regulation

1.3 references both futures customer funds and Cleared Swaps Customer

Collateral, regulation 1.49 references to both classes of funds.

Therefore, regulation 22.9 can reference regulation 1.49 without making

a specific reference to Cleared Swaps Customer Collateral, which the

Commission has always intended.

Moreover, as a result of the corrections to the definition

described above, the Commission is making (1) a technical correction to

regulation 22.10 (``Application of other regulatory provisions'') to

avoid confusion as to the applicability of regulations 1.27, 1.28,

1.29, and 1.30 to Cleared Swaps, Cleared Swaps Customers, and Cleared

Swaps Customer Collateral, and (2) technical corrections to regulations

22.13(a)(2) and 22.15 to incorporate the new ``Futures Customer'' and

``Foreign Futures or Foreign Options Customer'' terms.

The Commission is also making technical corrections to regulation

22.11, regulation 22.13(a)(1), the title of regulation 22.14,

regulation 22.14(a)(2), regulation 22.14(c)(2), regulation 22.15, and

the title of regulation of 22.16 by replacing references to

``Customer'' with

[[Page 66304]]

the correct term ``Cleared Swaps Customer.'' Since its publication,

regulation 22.11 has always intended to reference only Cleared Swaps

Customers.

In addition, the Commission is making technical corrections to

regulation 22.12 (``Information to be maintained regarding Cleared

Swaps Customer Collateral'') by replacing the term ``Cleared Swaps

Customer Funds,'' with the correct term, ``Cleared Swaps Customer

Collateral.''

The Commission notes that its regulations refer to ``customer

funds'' in the following regulations: 3.10, 3.21, 5.5, 39.15, 39.16,

and 170.5, as well as in Appendices to part 190. ``Customer funds''

also appears in the following regulations recently amended by the

Commission's final rulemaking concerning Core Principles and Other

Requirements for Designated Contract Markets: \92\ 1.52, 38.603,

38.604, and Appendix B to part 38. The Commission believes that these

provisions properly refer to ``customer funds'' as revised regulation

1.3(gg) now defines that term, i.e., to connote both ``futures customer

funds'' and ``Cleared Swaps Customer Collateral.''

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\92\ 77 FR 3661 (June 19, 2012) (Effective date: August 20,

2012).

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B. Part 7

The Commission proposed to rename part 7 of the Commission's

regulations ``Registered Entity Rules Altered or Supplemented by the

Commission,'' thus reflecting the language in section 8a(7) of the Act,

as amended by the Dodd-Frank Act, which provides the basis for part 7.

The Commission also proposed to make a similar change in regulation

7.1, replacing contract market rules with registered entity rules.

Finally, the Commission proposed to remove and reserve subparts B

(Chicago Mercantile Exchange Rules) and C (Board of Trade of the City

of Chicago Rules) and their associated sections. The Commission

received no comments regarding the proposed amendments to part 7 and is

adopting these amendments as proposed.

C. Part 8

The Commission proposed to remove part 8 of its regulations.

Regulation 38.2 enumerates the provisions with which DCMs are not

required to comply. The part 8 regulations are among those

provisions.\93\ In the DCM Core Principles final rules, the Commission

adopted regulations in ``Subpart N--Disciplinary Procedures'' of part

38 to amend the disciplinary procedure requirements applicable to

DCMs.\94\ Several of the regulations adopted in subpart N of part 38

are similar to the text of the disciplinary procedures found in part 8

of the Commission's regulations.\95\ The Commission proposed to remove

part 8 from its regulations to avoid any confusion that could result

from those regulations containing two sets of exchange disciplinary

procedures. The Commission received no comments regarding the proposed

deletion of part 8 and is therefore deleting those regulations as

proposed.

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\93\ 17 CFR 38.2.

\94\ 77 FR at 36649. The DCM Core Principles final rules take

effect on August 20, 2012. Section 735 of the Dodd-Frank Act

eliminates all DCM designation criteria, including Designation

Criterion 6 (Disciplinary Procedures). Section 735 of the Dodd-Frank

Act creates a new Core Principle 13 (Disciplinary Procedures) that

is devoted exclusively to exchange disciplinary proceedings, and

captures disciplinary concepts inherent in both Designation

Criterion 6 and in current DCM Core Principle 2.

\95\ Paragraph (b)(4) of the acceptable practices for former

Core Principle 2 referenced part 8 of the Commission's regulations

as an example that DCMs could follow to comply with Core Principle

2. 17 CFR pt. 38, app. B, Acceptable Practices for Core Principle 2

at (b)(4). In its experience, the Commission has found that many

DCMs' disciplinary programs do in fact model their disciplinary

structures and processes on part 8.

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D. Parts 15, 18, 21, and 36

The Commission also proposed to incorporate changes into parts 15,

18, 21, and 36 of its regulations to account for (1) the DFA's

elimination of two categories of exempt markets, exempt commercial

markets (``ECMs'') and electronic boards of trade (``EBOTs''); and (2)

the DFA's grandfather relief provisions for such entities.

Section 723 of the DFA repealed CEA section 2(h), thus eliminating

the ECM category. Section 734 of the DFA repealed CEA section 5d, thus

eliminating the EBOT category. Section 734 also repealed CEA section

5a, thus eliminating the DTEF category of regulated markets effective

July 15, 2011, as discussed above.

Both sections 723 and 734 of the Dodd-Frank Act contain grandfather

provisions allowing ECMs and EBOTs to petition the Commission to

continue to operate as ECMs and EBOTs. Pursuant to the grandfather

provisions, in September 2010, the Commission issued orders regarding

the treatment of such grandfather petitions (the ``Grandfather Relief

Orders'').\96\ Under the Grandfather Relief Orders, the Commission may,

subject to certain conditions, provide relief to ECMs and EBOTs for up

to one year from the general effective date of the DFA's amendments to

the CEA. On July 13, 2012, the Commission amended for the second time a

Commission order dated July 14, 2011, by, among other things, allowing

ECMs and EBOTs, as well as markets that rely on pre-DFA CEA section

2(d)(2), to rely only on the amended order (``Second Amended July 14

Order'') after July 16, 2012.\97\

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\96\ 75 FR 56513 (Sept. 16, 2010).

\97\ 77 FR 41260 (July 13, 2012).

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Pursuant to the DFA and the Grandfather Relief Orders, the

Commission proposed to remove from parts 15, 18, 21 and 36 \98\

references to CEA sections 2(h) and 5d and to replace those references,

where appropriate, with references to the Grandfather Relief Orders as

the authority under which ECMs and EBOTs can continue to operate. The

Commission also proposed to remove from parts 15, 18, 21, and 36 of its

regulations references to CEA sections 2(d), 2(g), and 5a, as well as

references to DTEFs. The Commission received no comments regarding the

amendments to parts 15, 18, 21, and 36. The Commission is revising

regulation 36.1 in order to account for the expiration of the

Grandfather Relief Orders on July 16, 2012, as well as reliance by ECMs

and EBOTs on the Second Amended July 14 Order. Otherwise, the

Commission is adopting the amendments to parts 15, 18, 21, and 36 as

proposed.

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\98\ Part 36 provisions apply to ECMs and EBOTs. The Commission

is not deleting part 36 in its entirety because part 36 provisions

will continue to apply to ECMs and EBOTs that continue to operate

under the Grandfather Relief Orders.

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E. Parts 41, 140, and 145

The Commission also proposed to incorporate changes into its

regulations to account for other new categories of registered entities

and to include new products now subject to Commission jurisdiction.

Section 733 of the Dodd-Frank Act added new section 5h to the CEA and

created SEFs. Section 728 of the Dodd-Frank Act added new section 21 to

the CEA and created SDRs. SEFs will allow for the trading of swap

transactions between ECPs, as that term is defined in CEA section

1a(18).\99\ In addition to the amendments contained in proposed part

37, the Commission proposed additional amendments throughout the

regulations to include SEFs and SDRs where necessary. The Commission

also proposed to delete from part 41 references to DTEFs as that term

was deleted from CEA section 5b by the Dodd-Frank Act, effective July

15, 2011.\100\ The Commission received

[[Page 66305]]

no comments to its deletion of the term DTEF from part 41 and is

adopting this change as proposed. In addition, as part of today's final

rulemaking, the Commission is making a technical change to part 41 so

that references to the definition of ``narrow-based security index'' is

cited as section 1a(35) of the Act instead of section 1a(25) of the

Act.

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\99\ For a detailed discussion of the proposed rules as they

directly relate to SEFs, see 76 FR 1214 (Jan. 7, 2011).

\100\ Section 5b of the CEA provided for the registration of

DTEFs. Although secondary references to DTEFs remain in the CEA,

none of the those would enable an entity to commence operations as a

DTEF. The proposed deletions are in regulations 41.2, 41.12, 41.13,

41.21-41.25, 41.27, 41.43 and 41.49.

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The proposed changes throughout parts 140 (Organization, Functions

and Procedures of the Commission) and 145 (Commission Records and

Information) reflect the need to incorporate SEFs and SDRs into the

Commission's regulations dealing with the rights and obligations of

other registered entities. The Commission proposed amending regulation

140.72 to provide the Commission with the authority to disclose

confidential information to SEFs and SDRs. This provision allows the

Commission, or specifically identified Commission personnel, to

disclose information necessary to effectuate the purposes of the CEA,

including such matters as transactions or market operations. The

Commission proposed amending regulation 140.96 to authorize the

Commission to publish in the Federal Register information pertaining to

the applications for registration of DCMs, SEFs and SDRs, as well as

new rules and rule amendments which present novel or complex issues

that require additional time to analyze, an inadequate explanation by

the submitting registered entity, or a potential inconsistency with the

Act, or regulations under the Act. The Proposal included an amendment

to regulation 140.99 to include SEFs and SDRs to the categories of

registered entities that may petition the Commission for exemptive

relief and no-action and interpretative letters.

The Commission proposed amending regulation 140.735-2 by adding

swap and retail forex transactions, as regulation 5.1(m) defines the

latter term, to those agreements, contracts or transactions Commission

staff may not trade. The Commission proposed amending regulation

140.735-3 to add SEFs and SDRs to the list of entities from which

Commission members and employees may not accept employment or

compensation.

The Commission received no comments about these proposed amendments

to part 140 and is adopting them as proposed, except for two technical

corrections to regulation 140.735-2. The Proposal added ``swap

transaction'' to the text of paragraph (c) but inadvertently omitted

updating a cross-reference to paragraph (b) that references ``swaps.''

Today's final rulemaking updates that cross-reference accordingly.

Similarly, the Proposal added ``swap transaction'' to one sentence of

paragraph (c)'s footnote three but, inadvertently, did not add ``swap

transaction'' to another sentence of that paragraph. Thus, today's

rulemaking makes a technical correction by adding ``swap transaction''

to that other sentence.

The Commission proposed amending regulation 145.9 to expand the

definition of ``submitter'' by adding SEFs and SDRs to the list of

registered entities to which a person's confidential information has

been submitted, and which, in turn, submit that information to the

Commission. This amendment allows individuals who have submitted

information to a SEF or SDR to request confidential treatment under

regulation 145.9. The Commission received no comments about this

proposed amendment and is adopting it as proposed.

Appendix A to Part 145 discusses those portions of Commission

records made available to the public. Section (b) discusses information

made available in the public reading area of the Commission's Office of

the Secretariat. The Proposal amended subsection (b)(13) by adding

``application form'' to the list of publicly available portions of

applications for becoming a registered entity. One month following the

publication of the Proposal, i.e. in July 2011, the Commission

published final amendments to Regulation 40.8(a) (``Availability of

public information'').\101\ Regulation 40.8(a) is consistent with

proposed (b)(13) of Appendix A except for the fact that Regulation

40.8(a) references a ``first page of the application cover sheet''

instead of an ``application form.'' Thus, as part of today's final

rulemaking, the Commission is making a technical correction by deleting

the proposed language, ``application form,'' and replacing it with

``first page of the application cover sheet'' so that it is consistent

with regulation 40.8(a.) \102\

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\101\ Provisions Common to Registered Entities, 76 FR 44776,

44797 (July 27, 2011).

\102\ In November 2011, the Commission published a final version

of Regulation 39.3 (``Procedures for [DCO] registration''). To be

consistent with Regulation 40.8(a), subsection (a)(5) of Regulation

39.3 (``Public information'') references the ``first page of the

Form DCO cover sheet.'' See Derivatives Clearing Organization

General Provisions and Core Principles Regarding Rulemaking, 76 FR

69334, 69431(Nov. 8, 2011). Form DCO is the application for

registration to become a DCO. Thus, today's technical correction to

subsection (b)(13) of Appendix A is consistent with both Regulation

40.8(a) and Regulation 39.3(a)(5).

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F. Parts 155 and 166

1. Regulation 155.2: Trading Standards for Floor Brokers

The Commission is removing the references to regulation 1.41 within

regulation 155.2 because the Commission removed and reserved regulation

1.41 in 2001 \103\ pursuant to the CFMA. The Commission is also

removing the related reference to former section 5a(a)(12)(A) of the

Act. The Commission did not receive any comments on these changes in

the Proposal and is finalizing them as proposed.

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\103\ 66 FR 42256.

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2. Regulation 155.3: Trading Standards for Futures Commission Merchants

and Regulation 155.4: Trading Standards for Introducing Brokers

The Commission is removing references to ``option customer'' in

these two regulations pursuant to this final rulemaking's deletion of

that term from regulation 1.3, described above. The Commission did not

receive comments about this change following publication of the

Proposal and is amending regulations 155.3 and 155.4 as proposed.

3. Regulation 166.2: Authorization To Trade

The Commission is revising this regulation by incorporating the

revised definition of ``commodity interest'' (regulation 1.3(yy)),

discussed above. The Commission believes that paragraph (a) of

regulation 166.2 should refer to futures, options, or swaps and that

paragraph (b) should refer only to futures or options. The Commission

did not receive comments about these changes and is adopting them as

proposed.

4. Regulation 166.5: Dispute Settlement Procedures

The Commission is revising this regulation by deleting a reference

to ``option customer'' because, as described above, today's rulemaking

deletes that term from regulation 1.3. The Commission is also making a

conforming, technical change to regulation 166.5, described in section

G.2., below.

G. Other General Changes to CFTC Regulations

1. Removal of References to DTEFs

The Commission is removing references to DTEFs and regulations

pertaining to DTEFs in parts 1, 5, 15, 36,

[[Page 66306]]

41, 140, and 155 because section 734 of the DFA abolished DTEFs,

effective July 15, 2011.\104\

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\104\ This rulemaking is not deleting those DTEF references that

other rulemakings have deleted or will delete from the Commission's

regulations (e.g., some references in part 3 and all references in

part 40).

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2. Other Conforming Changes

The Commission is also making changes to various parts of its

regulations to update cross-references to CEA provisions, now

renumbered after the passage of the DFA. An example of one such change

is amended regulation 166.5, in which the Commission has updated the

reference to the statutory definition of the term ``eligible contract

participant,'' to reflect the Dodd-Frank Act's renumbering of CEA

section 1a. Additionally, where typographical errors or other minor

inconsistencies were discovered while reviewing CFTC regulations, this

rulemaking includes instructions and amended regulations to correct

them.

III. Administrative Compliance

A. Paperwork Reduction Act

Sections 1.31, 1.33, 1.35, 1.37, and 1.39 of the Commission's

regulations are being amended to provide that records of swap

transactions be kept in a similar manner to records of futures

transactions. These amended provisions impose new information

recordkeeping requirements that constitute the collection of

information within the meaning of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995

(``PRA'').\105\ Under the PRA, an agency may not conduct or sponsor,

and a person is not required to respond to, a collection of information

unless it has been approved by the Office of Management and Budget

(``OMB'') and displays a currently valid control number.\106\ This

rulemaking contains new collections of information for which the

Commission must seek a valid control number. The Commission therefore

has requested that OMB assign a control number for this collection of

information. The Commission has also submitted the proposed rulemaking,

this final rule release, and supporting documentation to OMB for review

in accordance with 44 U.S.C. 3507(d) and 5 CFR 1320.11. The title for

these new collections of information is ``Adaptation of Regulations to

Incorporate Swaps,'' OMB Control Number 3038-0090. Responses to these

information collections will be mandatory.

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\105\ 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.

\106\ Id.

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With respect to all of the Commission's collections, the Commission

will protect proprietary information according to the Freedom of

Information Act and 17 CFR part 145, ``Commission Records and

Information.'' In addition, section 8(a)(1) of the Act strictly

prohibits the Commission, unless specifically authorized by the Act,

from making public ``data and information that would separately

disclose the business transactions or market positions of any person

and trade secrets or names of customers.'' The Commission also is

required to protect certain information contained in a government

system of records according to the Privacy Act of 1974, 5 U.S.C. 552a.

1. Information To Be Provided by Reporting Entities/Persons

a. Amendments to Regulation 1.31 (Books and Records; Keeping and

Inspection)

Regulation 1.31 describes the manner in which ``all books and

records required to be kept by the Act'' must be maintained. Most of

the requirements of regulation 1.31 are applicable to FCMs, IBs, RFEDs,

CTAs, CPOs, and members of DCMs and SEFs in conjunction with other part

1 regulations, and the PRA burdens either have been or will be covered

by the OMB control numbers associated with the other part 1

regulations. Examples of these other part 1 regulations are regulation

1.33, which requires certain registrants to produce monthly

confirmation statements, and regulation 1.35, which requires the

maintenance of records of cash commodity, futures, and option

transactions (as finalized, Records of commodity interest and cash

commodity transactions). Regulation 1.31 is applicable to SDs and MSPs

by way of the part 23 regulations.\107\

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\107\ Swap Dealer and Major Swap Participant Recordkeeping,

Reporting, and Duties Rules, 77 FR 20128 (Apr. 3, 2012).

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i. Obligation To Develop and Maintain Recordkeeping Policies and

Controls

Regulation 1.31 additionally contains discrete stand-alone

collections for which a control number must be sought. Subsection

(b)(3)(ii) requires persons keeping records using electronic storage

media to ``develop and maintain written operational procedures and

controls (an `audit system') designed to provide accountability over

[the entry of records into the electronic storage media].'' This

provision is already applicable to FCMs, RFEDs, IBs, CTAs, CPOs, and

members of DCMs, and would be applicable to SDs and MSPs pursuant to

the part 23 regulations. As members of SEFs will be newly subject to

the part 1 regulations, the Commission must estimate the burden of

subsection (b)(3)(ii) on these entities and seek OMB approval for this

new application of the subsection.

The Commission anticipates that members of SEFs may incur certain

one-time start-up costs in connection with establishing the audit

system. This will include drafting and adopting procedures and controls

and may include updates to existing recordkeeping systems. The

Commission estimates the burden hours associated with these one-time

start-up costs to be 100 hours per SEF member.

As there are not any SEFs operating at the present, in light of the

fact that the Commission has not yet finalized regulations concerning

SEF Core Principles, it is not possible for the Commission to estimate

with precision how many SEF members there will be or how many of those

SEF members will be FCMs, SDs, or MSPs that are being covered by

already pending existing information collections. Nonetheless, the

Commission has estimated that 35 SEFs will register with it after the

Dodd-Frank Act becomes effective, and now is estimating that there may

be on average 100 members of a SEF that will not fall under one of the

other collections. Accordingly, the aggregate new burden of subsection

(b)(3)(ii) is estimated to be 100 one-time burden hours to

approximately 3,500 SEF members.

The Commission expects that compliance and operations managers will

be employed in the establishment of the written procedures and controls

under subsection (b)(3)(ii). According to recent Bureau of Labor

Statistics, the mean hourly wage of an employee under occupation code

11-3031, ``Financial Managers,'' that is employed by the ``Securities

and Commodity Contracts Intermediation and Brokerage'' industry is

$80.90.\108\ Because members of SEFs may be large entities that may

engage employees with wages above the mean, the Commission has

conservatively chosen to use a mean hourly wage of $100 per hour.

Accordingly, the burden associated with developing written procedures

and controls will total approximately $10,000 for each applicable

member of a SEF on a one-time basis.

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\108\ Occupational Employment Statistics, Occupation Employment

and Wages: 11-3031 Financial Managers, http://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes113031.htm (May 2011).

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ii. Representation to the Commission Prior to Initial Use of System

Members of SEFs will also have to comply with regulation 1.31(c),

which requires persons employing an

[[Page 66307]]

electronic storage system to provide a representation to the Commission

prior to the initial use of the system.\109\ The Commission estimates

the burden of drafting this representation in accordance with

regulation 1.31(c) and submitting it to the Commission to be one hour.

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\109\ As with subsection (b)(3)(ii), regulation 1.31(c) is

already applicable or will be made applicable by other actions to

FCMs, IBs, DCM members, as well as SDs or MSPs pursuant to the part

23 regulations.

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According to recent Bureau of Labor Statistics, the mean hourly

wage of an employee under occupation code 11-3031, ``Financial

Managers,'' (which includes operations managers) that is employed by

the ``Securities and Commodity Contracts Intermediation and Brokerage''

industry is $80.90.\110\ Because members of SEFs may be large entities

that may engage employees with wages above the mean, the Commission has

conservatively chosen to use a mean hourly wage of $100 per hour.

Accordingly, the burden associated with drafting and submitting the

representation prior to using an electronic storage system will be $100

($100 x 1 hour) per affected member of a SEF.

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\110\ Occupational Employment Statistics, Occupation Employment

and Wages: 11-3031 Financial Managers, http://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes113031.htm (May 2011).

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

iii. Comments Received

The Commission did not receive any comments concerning the cost for

SEF members to comply with the recordkeeping requirements contained in

regulation 1.31.

b. Amendments to Regulation 1.33 (Monthly and Confirmation Statements)

The Commission is amending regulation 1.33 by requiring FCMs to

include in their monthly and confirmation statements sent to customers

certain specified information related to a customer's Cleared Swap

positions. The information required to be summarized in respect of swap

transactions will be analogous to information currently required to be

kept in respect of futures and commodity option transactions. The

Commission estimates the burden of complying with regulation 1.33 in

respect of swap transactions to be 1 hour for each Cleared Swap

confirmation and 1 hour for each monthly statement.

According to recent Bureau of Labor Statistics, the mean hourly

wage of an employee under occupation code 11-3031, ``Financial

Managers,'' (which includes operations managers) that is employed by

the ``Securities and Commodity Contracts Intermediation and Brokerage''

industry is $80.90.\111\ Accordingly the burden associated with

complying with regulation 1.33 in respect of each Cleared Swap

confirmation will be $80.90 ($80.90 x 1 hour), and the burden will be

$80.90 ($80.90 x 1 hour) for each monthly statement regarding Cleared

Swaps.

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\111\ Occupational Employment Statistics, Occupation Employment

and Wages: 11-3031 Financial Managers, http://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes113031.htm (May 2011).

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

i. Comments Received

The Commission did not receive any comments concerning the cost for

FCMs to comply with the recordkeeping requirements contained in

regulation 1.33 with respect to their swap transactions.

c. Amendments to Regulation 1.35 (Records of Commodity Interest and

Cash Commodity Transactions)

i. Obligation To Develop and Maintain Recordkeeping Policies and

Controls

The amendments will require members of SEFs to comply with the

regulation 1.35 recordkeeping requirements that are currently followed

by FCMs, IBs, RFEDs, and members of DCMs. The Commission anticipates

that members of SEFs will spend approximately eight hours per trading

day (or 2,016 hours per year based on 252 trading days) compiling and

maintaining transaction records.

According to recent Bureau of Labor Statistics, the mean hourly

wage of an employee under occupation code 11-3031, ``Financial

Managers,'' (which includes operations managers) that is employed by

the ``Securities and Commodity Contracts Intermediation and Brokerage''

industry is $80.90.\112\ Because members of SEFs may be large entities

that may engage employees with wages above the mean, the Commission has

conservatively chosen to use a mean hourly wage of $100 per hour. Thus,

each SEF member will have a burden of $201,600 per year (2,016 hours x

$100/hour).

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\112\ Occupational Employment Statistics, Occupation Employment

and Wages: 11-3031 Financial Managers, http://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes113031.htm (May 2011).

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

The amendments to regulation 1.35 will also require FCMs, RFEDs,

IBs, and members of DCMs to comply with the regulation 1.35

recordkeeping requirements for any swap transactions into which they

enter. Because the proposed recordkeeping requirements for swaps would

be equivalent to the recordkeeping requirements they must currently

follow in respect of futures and commodity option transactions, the

additional burden for any swap transaction would be the same for any

additional futures and commodity option transaction for which they keep

records pursuant to regulation 1.35 in its current form. The Commission

estimates that the recordkeeping burden associated with each swap

transaction would be 0.5 hours, for a total burden of $50 per

transaction.

ii. Comments Received

The Commission did not receive any comments concerning the excepted

cost of complying with the aforementioned revisions to regulation 1.35.

d. Amendments to Regulation 1.37 (Customer's Name, Address, and

Occupation Recorded; Record of Guarantor or Controller of Account)

i. Obligation To Develop and Maintain Recordkeeping Policies and

Controls

The Commission is amending regulation 1.37(a) by requiring each

FCM, IB, and member of a DCM to keep the same kind of record (showing

the customer's name, address, occupation or business, and name of any

other person guaranteeing the account or exercising any trading control

over it) for any swap transactions it ``carries or introduces'' for

another person. The Commission estimates that it will take each of

these entities an average of 0.4 hours to gather the information and

file it or key it into the entity's customer recordkeeping programs.

The Commission also is amending regulation 1.37(b) by requiring

each FCM carrying an omnibus account for another FCM, a foreign broker,

a member of a DCM or any other person to maintain a daily record for

such account of the total open long contracts and the total open short

contracts in each swap. FCMs presently have an equivalent obligation

with respect to futures and commodity option transactions. These daily

records typically are maintained in electronic form. Therefore, once a

position is entered into the entity's systems, the daily record will be

automatically available. The Commission estimates that entering the

position into the system, commencing with the placement of an order and

ending with execution will take each of these entities an average of

0.4 hours.

The Commission additionally is amending regulation 1.37(c) by

requiring SEFs to comply with a provision that DCMs must currently

follow: Keep a record showing the true name, address, and principal

occupation or business of any foreign trader executing transactions on

the

[[Page 66308]]

facility or exchange. According to regulation 1.37(d), this provision

does not apply in respect of futures/options/swaps that foreign traders

execute through FCMs or IBs.

The Commission estimates that it would take a SEF a total of 0.4

hours to prepare each record in accordance with regulation 1.37(c).

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the mean hourly wage of an

employee under occupation code 43-9021, ``Data Entry Keyer,'' is

$13.95.\113\ Because SEFs may be large entities employing persons at

wages higher than the average, the Commission conservatively estimates

the mean hourly wage to be $19.03 per hour. Thus, the burden associated

with preparing a record with regulation 1.37(c) would be $7.61 ($19.03/

hour x 0.4 hours).

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\113\ Occupational Employment Statistics, National Industry-

Specific Occupational Employment and Wage Estimates, NAICS 523100--

Securities and Commodity Contracts Intermediation and Brokerage,

http://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes439021.htm (May 2011).

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

ii. Comments Received

The Commission did not receive any comments concerning the

extension of regulation 1.37 to swap transactions executed by FCMs,

IBs, and other DCM members.

e. Amendments to Regulation 1.39 (Simultaneous Buying and Selling

Orders of Different Principals; Execution of, for and Between

Principals)

i. Obligation To Develop and Maintain Recordkeeping Policies and

Controls

The Commission is amending regulation 1.39, which currently applies

to DCMs, by enabling members of SEFs to execute simultaneous buying and

selling orders of different principals pursuant to rules of the SEF if

certain conditions are met. Among those conditions, a SEF would have to

record these transactions in a manner that ``shows all transaction

details required to be captured by the Act, Commission rule, or

regulation.'' The Commission anticipates that the data to be captured

would already exist in the SEF's trading system. The Commission

estimates that it will take the SEF an average of 0.1 hours to capture

this data, and storage costs of less than $1 per record.

According to the recent Bureau of Labor Statistics, the mean hourly

wage of computer programmers under occupation code 15-1131 and computer

software developers under program codes 15-1132 are between $36.54 and

$44.27.\114\ Because SEFs may be large entities that may engage

employees with wages above the mean, the Commission has conservatively

chosen to use a mean hourly programming wage of $50 per hour for each

of the categories of persons who will have to establish the system for

maintaining oral records. Accordingly, the start-up burden associated

with the data capture requirements would be an average of $5.

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\114\ Occupational Employment Statistics, Occupational

Employment and Wages: 15-1131, Computer Programmers, http://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes151131.htm (May 2011); Occupational

Employment Statistics, Occupational Employment and Wages: 15-1132,

Computer Software Developers, http://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes151132.htm (May 2011).

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

ii. Comments Received

The Commission did not receive any comments concerning the

extension of regulation 1.39 to transactions executed on a SEF.

B. Regulatory Flexibility Act

The Regulatory Flexibility Act (``RFA'') requires that agencies

consider whether the rules they propose will have a significant

economic impact on a substantial number of small entities and, if so,

provide a regulatory flexibility analysis respecting the impact.\115\

The rules adopted by the Commission are for the most part technical

amendments to conform the affected parts to provisions of the Dodd-

Frank Act and, as such, are non-substantive and will not have a

significant economic impact on a substantial number of any types of

entities, whether or not they are small entities. In order to conform

the Commission's existing records regulations to its new recordkeeping

requirements for SDs and MSPs (Regulation 23.202 (``Daily Trading

Records'')),\116\ the Commission also is amending its regulation 1.35

records requirements (as finalized, Records of commodity interest and

cash commodity transactions) to require FCMs, IBs, RFEDs, and members

of DCMs to observe recordkeeping requirements for swaps that they

currently observe with respect to their futures and commodity option

transactions.

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\115\ 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.

\116\ See Swap Dealer and Major Swap Participant Recordkeeping,

Reporting, and Duties Rules; Futures Commission Merchant and

Introducing Broker Conflicts of Interest Rules; and Chief Compliance

Officer Rules for Swap Dealers, Major Swap Participants, and Futures

Commission Merchants, 77 FR 20128 (Apr. 3, 2012) (adopting for SDs

and MSPs reporting and recordkeeping standards now found in 17 CFR

23.201-23.203).

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Additionally, the Commission is applying certain of those books and

records regulations to members of SEFs, mirroring obligations that

apply to members of DCMs.

Accordingly, the Commission is hereby determining that most of the

entities affected by this rulemaking will not be significantly

economically impacted by the conforming and technical rules being

adopted. As discussed below, the Commission is also determining that

most of the entities that will be subject to compliance with this

rulemaking are not small entities for the purposes of the RFA.

Therefore, pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 605(b), the Chairman, on behalf of the

Commission, certifies by category of market participant below that the

final rules will not have a significant economic effect on a

substantial number of small entities.

1. FCMs, RFEDs, DCMs, ECPs, SEFs and Large Traders

The Commission has previously determined that registered FCMs,

RFEDs, DCMs, ECPs, SEFs and large traders are not small entities for

purposes of the RFA.\117\ The Commission has been informed, in the

context of other rulemakings, that there are some entities that are

both ECPs as defined in the CEA and also are small entities as defined

by the Small Business Administration (``SBA''). In particular, the SBA

has defined as small entities those entities that are engaged in the

generation, transmission, and/or distribution of electric energy for

sale and whose total electric output for the preceding year did not

exceed four million megawatt hours. As noted previously, however, this

rulemaking involves primarily technical conforming amendments that

alone do not impose significant economic impacts on any group of

entities, and that overlap with substantive rulemakings in which the

Commission has assessed or will assess the economic impact on small

entities to the extent required under the RFA. Accordingly, the

Chairman, on behalf of the Commission, hereby certifies pursuant to 5

U.S.C. 605(b) that the final rules will not have a significant economic

impact on a substantial number of small entities with respect to these

entities.

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\117\ See Policy Statement and Establishment of Definitions of

``Small Entities'' for Purposes of the Regulatory Flexibility Act,

47 FR 18618, 18619, Apr. 30, 1982 (DCMs, FCMs, and large traders)

(``RFA Small Entities Definitions''); Opting Out of Segregation, 66

FR 20740, 20743, Apr. 25, 2001 (ECPs); Regulation of Off-Exchange

Retail Foreign Exchange Transactions and Intermediaries, 75 FR

55410, 55416, Sept. 19, 2010 (RFEDs) (``Retail Forex Final Rules'');

and Position Limits for Futures and Swaps; Final Rule and Interim

Final Rule, 76 FR 71626, 71680, Nov. 18, 2011 (SEFs).

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[[Page 66309]]

2. IBs

As discussed above, most of the provisions of this rulemaking are

technical and conforming in nature, and overlap with substantive

rulemakings in which the Commission has conducted RFA analyses to the

extent such are required.

The Commission provided an initial regulatory flexibility analysis

for IBs in the its proposing release, as required by 5 U.S.C. 603,

because the oral recordkeeping requirement under regulation 1.35(a), as

proposed, may have had a significant economic impact on a significant

number of small IBs.\118\ As discussed above, the Commission has

decided not to adopt the proposed oral communications recordkeeping

requirement under regulation 1.35(a) as part of today's final rule.

Instead, the Commission intends to adopt that requirement in a future

final rulemaking.

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\118\ See 76 FR 33066, 33079-80, June 7, 2011.

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C. Consideration of Costs and Benefits

Section 15(a) of the CEA requires the Commission to consider the

costs and benefits of its actions before promulgating a regulation

under the CEA or issuing certain orders. Section 15(a) further

specifies that the costs and benefits shall be evaluated in light of

the following five broad areas of market and public concern: (1)

Protection of market participants and the public; (2) efficiency,

competitiveness and financial integrity of futures markets; (3) price

discovery; (4) sound risk management practices; and (5) other public

interest considerations. The Commission considers the costs and

benefits resulting from its discretionary determinations with respect

to the section 15(a) factors.

In July 2010, Congress passed the Dodd-Frank Act which, among other

things, establishes a comprehensive regime for the regulation of swaps.

The Dodd-Frank Act brings swaps under the Commission's jurisdiction and

obligates the Commission to adopt new regulations related to

registration and regulation of SDs and MSPs, trade execution and

clearing requirements, and swap data recordkeeping and real time

reporting. In section 721 of the Dodd-Frank Act, Congress added CEA

section 1a(47) to add a definition of the term ``swap.''

In response to Congress's act of placing swaps under the

Commission's authority, the Commission is exercising its discretion to

amend its regulations to ensure that SDs, MSPs, SEFs, and swaps are

subject to the Commission's comprehensive regulatory regime, and in

June 2011, proposed to amend parts 1, 5, 7, 8, 15, 18, 21, 36, 41, 140,

145, 155, and 166 to update its regulations accordingly.\119\

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\119\ 76 FR 33066.

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As described in the Background, above (section I. of this

preamble), some of the amendments contained in this release are

technical in nature; for example, they amend various definitions in

regulation 1.3 to track the DFA's amendments to the CEA's definitions

of the same term, such as futures commission merchants. Another example

of a technical change is the deletion of references to derivatives

transaction execution facilities, a category of exchange that the DFA

eliminated. Other revisions contained in this rulemaking amend

recordkeeping and reporting requirements, which presently apply to

futures, so that they cover swap transactions as well. An example of

this type of change is the revision to parts 15, 18, 21, and 36 to

implement DFA's grandfathering and phase-out of exempt boards of trade

and exempt commercial markets. Certain amendments in this release are

designed to harmonize recordkeeping requirements for various registered

entities transacting in swaps. For example, the amendments to

Sec. Sec. 1.31 harmonize part 1 recordkeeping requirements with those

applicable to SDs and MSPs under part 23 regulations. Lastly, this

rulemaking amends procedures pertaining to the post-execution

allocation of bunched orders so that they can be used in respect of

swap transactions similarly to how they are currently used for futures

transactions.

The benefits and costs that the Commission considers below are

those attributable to its amendments of the rules discussed compared to

a scenario in which these rules were not amended.

Section 1.31 Books and Records; Keeping and Information

Summary Description

Prior to the amendments made in this final rule, Sec. 1.31

specified the conditions under which records required by the Act of any

applicable entity shall be maintained. The section stated that these

records shall be kept for a period of five years from the transaction

date, must be ``readily accessible'' for the first two years, and

stipulated a number of further conditions pertaining to the auditing of

record storage systems, storing duplicate copies of records, and other

items. As described above in II.A.3, the amendments in this final rule

specify that: (1) Required books and records must be kept in their

original form (for paper records) or in their native file formats (for

electronic records); (2) when books and records are requested by the

Commission, they must be produced in a form and on any media specified

by the Commission; (3) required records of any swap or related cash or

forward transaction must be kept until the ``termination, maturity,

expiration, transfer, assignment, or novation date of the transaction''

and then for an additional five-year period; and (4) records of oral

communications required to be maintained pursuant to regulation

23.202(a)(1) and (b)(1) must be kept until the ``termination, maturity,

expiration, transfer, assignment, or novation date of the transaction''

and then for an additional one-year period.

Benefits

The public and the financial integrity of the markets benefit from

this amendment because it promotes retention of metadata (i.e., data

about data). This amendment enhances the Commission's forensic

capabilities, including the ability to trace communications and

transactions. Moreover, requiring entities to retain data in its native

file format reduces the likelihood that data could be manipulated or

corrupted, either intentionally or unintentionally, which makes it more

reliable.

In addition, if entities are not required to store data in its

native file format, some entities may choose to store some of their

data on paper records or in electronic image formats (such as PDF)

which cannot be easily converted into a form that allows it to be read

by programs that the Commission sometimes uses for purposes of

investigation and analysis. For example, market participants have

sometimes submitted large amounts of financial data to the Commission

on printed pages arguing that OCR technology makes such pages ``machine

readable'' and therefore is compliant with the existing requirements

under Sec. 1.31(b)(3)(i). While OCR technology is useful in converting

printed text into an electronic form, it has not been similarly helpful

in converting financial data provided to the Commission. When market

participants have submitted large data sets to the Commission on

printed pages, it has been problematic, forcing the Commission to

either enter extraordinary amounts of data into its systems manually,

an expensive process that introduces the possibility of data entry

errors, or to abandon the use of programs that are often helpful in the

[[Page 66310]]

course of investigation, which severely limits the usefulness of that

data for investigation purposes.

Requiring all entities subject to regulation 1.31 to retain data in

its native file format mitigates the potential that market participants

could discard records in an effort to thwart Commission investigations,

or that they could do so unintentionally but with similar effect and

increases the likelihood that the data will exist in a form that can be

converted to meet the Commission's needs. The requirement that entities

present that data to the Commission in a format and on a medium

requested by the Commission will help to ensure that the Commission is

able to obtain data from market participants in a form that it can use

effectively for detecting and prosecuting prohibited market activities.

And by improving the efficiency and effectiveness of the Commission's

enforcement efforts, these requirements help deter fraud and

manipulation, and promote the integrity of the markets subject to the

jurisdiction of the Commission.

By providing that required written records pertaining to swaps and

related cash or forward transactions must be retained for the life of

the swap plus five years, the Commission will have the ability to

create a sufficient audit trail from which to ascertain and, if

necessary recreate, the facts and circumstances giving rise to the

transaction, even if the need to do so arises several months or even a

few years after the relevant transactions occurred.

Costs

The amended requirement to store electronic records in their native

format will likely create additional data storage costs for market

participants. The incremental cost of storage depends on whether or not

the entity in question was previously storing data in its native format

and the number and size of records that must be stored in their native

format. The Commission requested but received no data from commenters

quantifying such costs. In order to quantify these costs the Commission

would need data sufficient to estimate the number of entities that do

not store data in its native file format, and the amount of additional

data that they would, on average, have to retain in order to store it

in its native file format. The Commission does not have that

information.

In addition, market participants will have additional storage costs

because the rule provides that required swap and related cash and

forward transaction data must be retained for the life of the swap plus

five years. These costs will depend on the number and tenor of swaps

and related cash and forward transactions that an entity enters into.

These factors are likely to vary widely among market participants. The

Commission does not have adequate information to estimate how many

firms are currently storing data in its native format, the number of

swap transactions that will be affected by the timelines implemented

here, or to estimate their tenor and the storage space required to

store related data. Therefore it is not possible to estimate the

additional storage space or cost of additional storage.

The requirement that entities submit information to the Commission

in a format and on a medium determined by the Commission will create

some costs for market participants. Entities that keep data in

proprietary systems or in formats that are not read by programs that

the Commission uses to aid in its investigations would need to adapt

their systems in order to develop this capability. And when requested

to do so by the Commission, such entities would have to convert their

data into the format requested by the Commission, which creates some

incremental costs as well. The Commission cannot estimate these

additional costs because it does not have adequate information to

estimate the number of entities that would need to adapt their systems

in order to allow for data conversion that meets the Commission's

needs. Moreover, it does not have information regarding the number of

inquiries that will require data conversion, or the amount of time that

entities would need to spend converting data when necessary. The latter

is likely to vary widely, depending on the data formats currently used

by market participants and the presence or absence of standard data

conversion software that might assist with such needs.

The rules provides that required swap and related cash and forward

transaction data must be retained for the life of the swap plus five

years also creates some data migration costs. Entities engaging in

long-dated swaps will likely upgrade their recordkeeping systems during

the period of time that they are required to keep data related to those

swaps and related cash or forward transactions. Such entities will have

to implement backward-compatible systems, or will have to reformat

older data so that it can be retained and retrieved using newer

systems. Either of these approaches will create some cost, however, it

is not possible to determine which approach entities are likely to take

or the cost that would likely result in either case. Therefore, the

Commission is not able to estimate the cost at this time.

Some commenters noted costs that would result from not being

allowed to convert paper records to electronic media for storage.\120\

In response, the Commission notes that regulation 1.31(b) still

provides that paper records stored on micrographic media or electronic

storage media (e.g. scanned copies) is sufficient to fulfill the

requirements of regulation 1.31(a)(1), and therefore the cost that

these commenters noted will not occur. Similarly, the Minneapolis Grain

Exchange expressed a concern that amendments to regulations 1.31 and

1.35, taken together, could ``require an electronic and paper copy of

the same information,'' leading to unnecessary costs on the part of

firms. As stated above, the Commission is not requiring that entities

retain both paper and electronic copies of the same information.

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\120\ See e.g., FIA and NFA.

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The amendments to the requirements for keeping and inspection of

records, mandated in this section, create certain costs. It is likely

that some SEF members will not have not been subject to regulation 1.31

previously and therefore will need to design written procedures and

controls for maintaining their recordkeeping system.\121\ For entities

that need to develop such procedures and controls for the first time,

the Commission estimates a one-time cost of approximately $13,000 to

$28,000.\122\

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\121\ Sec. 1.31(b)(3)(ii).

\122\ Calculations in the PRA section rely calculations rely on

wage estimates from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. However, for the

purposes of the Cost Benefit Considerations section, we have used

wage estimates that are taken from the SIFMA ``Report on Management

and Professional Earnings in the Securities Industry 2011'' because

industry participants are likely to be more familiar with them.

Hourly costs are calculated assuming 2,000 hours per year and a

multiplier of 5.35 to account for overhead and bonuses. All totals

calculated on the basis of cost estimates are rounded to two

significant digits.

This estimate assumes 20-40 hours of a compliance attorney's

time, 20-40 hours of an intermediate compliance specialist's time,

5-15 hours of a senior database administrator's time, and 5-15 hours

of an office manager's time in order to design and implement the

written procedures and controls. The average cost for a compliance

attorney is $351.24/hour [($131,303 per year)/(2000 hours per year)

* 5.35 = $351.24 per hour]. The average cost for an intermediate

compliance specialist is $351.24/hour [($58,303 per year)/(2000

hours per year) * 5.35 = $351.24 per hour]. The average cost for a

senior database administrator's time is $280.22/hour [($104,755 per

year)/(2000 hours per year) * 5.35 = $280.22 per hour]. The average

cost for an office manager's time is $229.72/hour [($85,875 per

year)/(2000 hours per year) * 5.35 = $229.72 per hour].

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[[Page 66311]]

In addition, the members of SEFs that have not previously been

subject to regulation 1.31 will have to provide a representation to the

Commission prior to their initial use of the system.\123\ The

Commission estimates that such entities will spend approximately 0.5

hours providing the submission, and therefore the estimated cost for

the submission is $78.\124\

Consideration of Alternatives

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\123\ See Sec. 1.31(c).

\124\ The average wage for an intermediate compliance specialist

is $155.96 [($58,303 per year)/(2,000 hours per year) * 5.35 =

$155.96]

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One commenter suggested that the Commission require records to be

kept indefinitely.\125\ In the Proposal, the Commission did not propose

to alter the requirements regarding the length of time during which

written records must be retained by relevant entities for any of the

transactions that were previously covered by the requirement, and

continues to believe that the existing requirements ensure access to

relevant records for a reasonable period of time while also limiting

costs to market participants. However, the amendments to regulation

1.31 added swaps and related cash and forward transactions to the types

of transactions that are covered, and as described above, established a

longer recordkeeping requirement for required books and records

regarding those transactions. The Commission believes that the long

product life of some swaps necessitates longer recordkeeping

requirements for related documents and data. However, the Commission

anticipates that data related to such transactions will not be needed

for enforcement purposes more than five years beyond the time when the

swap has been terminated, novated, etc. Therefore, providing that

market participants must retain required data more than five years

beyond that date would, in the Commission's view, impose unnecessary

cost upon market participants without significant added benefit.

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\125\ Mr. Chris Barnard.

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The Proposal would have required oral records to be retained by SDs

and MSPs until the swap has been terminated, novated, etc., and for

five years thereafter, whereas the final rule requires these entities

to retain such records until the swap has been terminated, novated,

etc., and for a period of one year thereafter. This may create some

cost by limiting the Commission's ability to obtain from SDs and MSPs

recordings related to events that occurred more than one year ago,

which could reduce the Commission's effectiveness in identifying and

prosecuting certain violations. However, the Commission anticipates

that in most cases, the one year requirementafter the life of the swap,

will be sufficient, and notes that the reduced retention requirement

reduces storage costs to market participants.

Section 1.35 Records of Commodity Interest and Cash Commodity

Transactions Introduction

Prior to this amendment, Sec. 1.35 specified which parties are

required to keep records related to commodity futures, commodity

options, and cash commodities. The requirements of Sec. 1.35 applied

to FCMs, RFEDs, IBs, and members of contract markets. The amendments to

regulation 1.35 extend these recordkeeping requirements to swap

transactions and to members of SEFs.

As described above in II.A.5, the amended rule also applies the

bunched order procedures for futures transactions to swaps, and adds

FCMs and IBs to the list of eligible account managers for orders

executed on a DCM or SEF, and also adds CTAs, FCMs, and IBs as eligible

account managers for orders executed bilaterally.

Benefits

As it explained when adopting similar transactional level

recordkeeping requirements for SDs and MSPs, the Commission believes

these recordkeeping requirements for swap transactions will contribute

to important, though unquantifiable, benefits.\126\ More specifically,

complete, rigorous transactional recordkeeping is a necessary element

to promote market integrity, as well as customer protection, by

providing an audit trail of past swap transactions. For, a strong audit

trail, among other things:

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\126\ See Swap Dealer and Major Swap Participant Recordkeeping,

Reporting, and Duties Rules; Futures Commission Merchant and

Introducing Broker Conflicts of Interest Rules; and Chief Compliance

Officer Rules for Swap Dealers, Major Swap Participants, and Futures

Commission Merchants, 77 FR 20128, 20172 (Apr. 3, 2012).

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Provides a basis for efficiently resolving transactional

disputes.

Facilitates a firm's ability to recognize and manage its

risk, thereby enhancing the risk management of the market as a whole.

Acts as a disincentive to engage in unduly risky,

injurious, or illegal conduct in that the conduct will be traceable.

And, in the event such conduct does occur, provides a

mechanism for policing such conduct, both internally as part of a

firm's compliance efforts and externally by regulators enforcing

applicable laws and regulations.

The rule also applies the procedures for handling bunched orders of

futures, to swaps, which enables account managers to reduce transaction

costs to customers by executing a single, large transaction on behalf

of multiple customers at the same time, and then allocating the

positions that were component parts of that transaction to specific

customers after the transaction has been executed. In addition, bunched

orders provide additional protection to customers against favoritism.

In the absence of bunched orders, when an account manager has several

customers that each need to take out positions in the same swap, the

manager would place several sequential orders for that swap. The series

of orders may move the price for that swap, in which case the last

customer order would receive a less favorable price than the first

customer order. By combining the orders, the manager is more likely to

find a single counterparty and a single price for the orders, in which

case the account manager can distribute the appropriate number of

shares to each account at a constant price per share. No customer is

favored over another in such a distribution. This promotes customer

protection and the integrity of the financial markets.

In addition, by adding FCMs and IBs to the list of eligible account

managers for orders executed on a DCM or SEF, and also adding CTAs,

FCMs, and IBs as eligible account managers for orders executed

bilaterally, the rule promotes competition among entities that are

permitted to execute bunched orders, which in turn, promotes

competitive pricing for account managers who want to execute bunched

orders. And by promoting competitive pricing, the amendment promotes

market efficiency. In addition, by permitting FCMs, IBs, and CTAs to

engage in bunched order transactions, the amendment creates benefits

for those entities because it allows them to provide an additional

service to clients, giving them an additional source of revenue.

Costs

Amendments in this final rule will require SEF members to comply

with regulation 1.35, and it is likely that some of those members will

not have been subject to Sec. 1.35 previously. The Commission

estimates that SEF members that are newly subject to Sec. 1.35 will

spend additional time each day compiling and maintaining transaction

records. The Commission estimates that the cost of that additional time

is

[[Page 66312]]

$236,000 to $393,000 per entity per year.\127\

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\127\ This is estimated to take 6-10 hours per day (assuming 252

days per year) of the time of an office services supervisor. The

average wage for an office services supervisor is $155.96 [($58,303

per year)/(2,000 hours per year) * 5.35 = $155.96]. $155.95 * 6 *

252 = 235,812.31. $155.95 * 10 * 252 = 393,020.52.

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Also, the amendments in this final rule will require FCMs, RFEDs,

IBs, and members of DCMs to comply with the regulation Sec. 1.35

recordkeeping requirements for any swap transactions into which they

enter. The Commission estimates that such entities will spend an

additional 0.5 hours per swap capturing and maintaining the records

required under Sec. 1.35, and therefore estimates that the per-swap

cost will be $83.00.\128\

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\128\ This estimates 0.5 hours of time from an office services

supervisor. The average salary for an office services supervisor is

$165.25/hour [($61,776 per year)/(2,000 hours per year) * 5.35 =

$165.25 per hour]. $165.25 * 0.5 = $82.63

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Section 1.3 Definitions

Introduction

As discussed in II.A.1, the Commission is amending and adding

several definitions in order to incorporate swaps within the

Commission's regulatory framework. Included among them are definitions

for ``customer,'' ``futures commission merchant,'' ``member,'' ``net

deficit,'' ``proprietary account,'' ``commodity trading advisor,''

``commodity pool operator,'' ``designated self-regulatory

organization,'' ``customer funds,'' ``strike price,'' ``introducing

broker,'' ``registered entity,'' ``registrant,'' ``open contract,''

``physical,'' and ``commodity interest.''

As discussed throughout this release, Congress amended the CEA to

address swaps. The amendments to regulation 1.3 (``Definitions'') help

effectuate that mandate and do not, in and of themselves, implicate any

costs or benefits. Any costs and benefits are associated with

substantive regulations that rely upon the revised definitions

contained in regulation 1.3.

Section 1.4 Electronic Signatures

Introduction

In its original form, Sec. 1.4 allowed a customer of an FCM or IB,

a retail forex customer of an RFED or FCM, and a pool participant or a

client of a CTA to use an electronic signature to provide any required

signatures under the CEA, as long as the FCM, RFED, IB, CPO, or CTA

elects generally to accept electronic signatures for such purposes and

``reasonable safeguards'' are in place. The amended rule published as

part of today's final rulemaking extends the benefit of electronic

signatures by including SDs, MSPs, and counterparties of SDs and MSPs

in the list of entities that may use electronic signatures for

acknowledgement of swap transactions.

Benefits

With respect to the protection of market participants and the

public, permitting FCMs, IBs, CPOs, CTAs, SDs, and MSPs to utilize

electronic signatures when executing swap transactions enables more

rapid processing of steps in the transaction process that requires

signatures than would be possible if using faxed copies or hard copies

for such purposes. This, in turn, reduces costs to market participants

by reducing the amount of time they spend handling paperwork and

enhances market efficiency by allowing transactions to be confirmed

more rapidly. In addition, this facilitates straight through processing

of swaps, which provides numerous efficiency and risk reduction

benefits.

Costs

The amendment to Sec. 1.4 is permissive, allowing SDs, MSPs, and

their counterparties to use electronic signatures if they choose, and

also allowing FCM's, IBs, CPOs, and CTAs to use electronic signatures

when engaging in swap transactions. The rule does not create any

affirmative obligations for market participants, and therefore does not

create direct costs to entities subject to Sec. 1.4. Costs to other

market participants and the public would only occur if electronic

signatures were somehow more susceptible to be falsified or corrupted

than non-electronic signatures. The Commission is not aware of any such

risk, and believes that it is unlikely, given that electronic

signatures are already widely used among market participants, including

other registered entities.

Sections 1.33 and 1.37

Introduction

These amended regulations require FCMs, IBs, RFEDs, SEFs, DCMs and

members of DCMs to comply with the same recordkeeping functions for

swaps that they currently adhere to with respect to futures and

commodity option transactions. Regulation 1.33 deals with monthly

confirmation statements, and regulation 1.37 deals with customers'

names and addresses as well as daily records showing total open long

and short contracts.

Benefits

By incorporating swaps into FCM, IB, RFED, DCM, and DCM members'

reporting requirements, the rule extends the benefits of such reporting

requirements to a new range of transactions, and to additional

customers of such entities. The benefits are likely to be increased

awareness among market participants of any losses or gains due to their

swap transactions, which may contribute to sound risk management.

Moreover, the monthly statements and the confirmation statements

required by Sec. 1.33 provide customers with additional opportunities

to identify potential mistakes made over the course of their

transaction that could result in an undesirable outcome, providing

further protection to customers of such entities that are clearing

swaps. Participants would also be able to view a list of fees charged

to their accounts and verify that all are valid charges and would thus

be better protected against accidental or fraudulent fees and charges.

The requirements of Sec. 1.37 will ensure that proper records are

maintained to identify the rightful owners of customer funds, and that

are kept on an omnibus basis, as well as to identify parties who own,

guarantee, or exercise control over any customer cleared swap accounts.

Proper records regarding the name of individuals or entities that own

customer funds, and daily reconciliation of balances in the omnibus

account, promote protection of customer funds held by entities that

place customer funds in such accounts. Furthermore, by requiring each

FCM carrying an omnibus account for any other person to maintain a

daily record of the total open long contracts and total open short

contracts in each swap, the final rule provides protection for the

customers that hold funds in such accounts. The daily records may be

used by the FCM to reconcile the omnibus accounts to their individual

customer obligations, thus helping to ensure that the omnibus accounts

have sufficient funds to meet their customer obligations.

Costs

Costs of this proposal include the cost of compliance on the part

of FCMs to compile and deliver monthly statements and confirmations

after every transaction. FCMs will bear a one-time cost to design the

confirmation statements, swap section of the monthly reports, and to

set up automated systems to produce them. The amendment is not likely

to necessitate new technology since FCMs can use the systems that

produce existing monthly

[[Page 66313]]

statements and confirmations to produce statements pertaining to swaps.

FCMs, however, will bear some costs designing and setting up their

systems to produce swap transaction confirmations and the swap section

of monthly statements. The Commission estimates that the per-entity

set-up cost will be between $4,900 and $17,000.\129\ The reports are

likely to be highly automated, which mitigates ongoing costs. Such

costs are also likely to be similar in magnitude to those incurred

through compliance with Sec. 1.33 as it pertains to futures positions.

The Commission estimates that it will cost FCMs approximately $1.40 per

swap transaction for the FCM to input the data that is required.\130\

The Commission estimates that entities are likely to spend $3,700 to

$7,300 monthly in order to maintain the systems and to produce the

relevant statements.\131\

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\129\ Estimate assumes 10-30 hours of IT professional time and

2-10 hours of a regulatory attorney's time in order to create and

automate the report. The average salary for a senior programmer is

$306.86/hour [($114,714 per year)/(2000 hours per year) * 5.35 =

$306.86 per hour]. The average salary for a compliance attorney is

$351.24/hour [($131,303 per year)/(2000 hours per year) * 5.35 =

$351.24 per hour].

\130\ The estimates assume an office services supervisor spends

5 minutes per transaction. The average salary for an office services

supervisor is $165.25/hour [($61,776 per year)/(2,000 hours per

year) * 5.35 = $165.25 per hour]. 5/60 * $165.25 = $1.38.

\131\ Estimate assumes 2-10 hours monthly of IT personnel time

and 2-16 hours of middle office personnel time. The average salary

for a programmer is $220.74/hour [($82,518 per year)/(2,000 hours

per year) * 5.35 = $220.74 per hour], and the average salary for an

office services supervisor is $165.25/hour [($61,776 per year)/

(2,000 hours per year) * 5.35 = $165.25 per hour]. The Commission

anticipates that most monthly reports will be sent to clients

electronically, but includes an additional $1,000 monthly for paper,

postage, and printing costs.

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Adding the requirement that certain entities maintain records of

the name, address, and occupation of customers that have deposited

funds with them will not create any set-up costs. The Commission

assumes that entities subject to Sec. 1.37 already have systems that

incorporate such information.\132\ The Commission estimates that the

ongoing cost to capture such information is $1,650 to $3,300 per

year.\133\ The Commission expects that creating the daily report that

provides the daily total of open long and short positions in each

omnibus account will require some modifications to existing systems.

The Commission estimates that this cost will be approximately $2,600 to

$9,900.\134\ Producing the daily report is likely to be a process that

is automated and therefore the Commission does not believe that there

will be incremental daily costs to produce the report. In addition, the

Commission recognizes that the requirements will obligate FCMs to enter

position data into their systems and estimates that this will require

approximately 0.2 hours of personnel time per swap transaction, which

results in a cost of approximately $33.00 per transaction.\135\ In

addition, the Commission estimates that for a SEF that will have to

keep records of foreign traders' names, addresses, and occupations

executing transactions on an exchange, the SEF will spend between

$17.00 and $83.00.\136\

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\132\ This is estimated to take 1-10 hours of time from IT

personnel. The average salary for a programmer is $220.74/hour

[($82,518 per year)/(2,000 hours per year) * 5.35 = $220.74 per

hour].

\133\ The Commission assumes 10-20 hours per year will be

required. The average salary for an office services supervisor is

$165.25/hour [($61,776 per year)/(2,000 hours per year) * 5.35 =

$165.25 per hour]. 10 hours * $165.25/hour = $1,652.50; and 20 hours

* $165.25/hour = $ 3,305.00.

\134\ This estimates 1-3 hours of time from a compliance

attorney and 10-40 hours of time from IT personnel. The average

compensation for a compliance attorney is $351.24/hour [$131,303 per

year/(2,000 hours per year) * 5.35 is $351.24 per hour]. The average

compensation for a programmer is $220.74/hour [($82,518 per year)/

(2,000 hours per year) * 5.35 = $220.74 per hour]. 1 * $351.24 =

$351.24. 3 * $351.24 = $1,053.71. $351.24 * 10 = $2,207.36. $351.24

* 40 = $8,829.43.

\135\ The estimate assumes 0.2 hours of labor per transaction

from an office services supervisor. The average salary for an office

services supervisor is $165.25/hour [($61,776 per year)/(2,000 hours

per year) * 5.35 = $165.25 per hour]. 0.2 * $165.25 = $33.05.

\136\ The estimates assume an office services supervisor spends

between 0.1 and 0.5 hours per transaction. The average salary for an

office services supervisor is $165.25/hour [($61,776 per year)/

(2,000 hours per year) * 5.35 = $165.25 per hour]. 0.1 * $165.25 =

$16.52; 0.5 * $165.25 = 82.63.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Section 1.39 Simultaneous Buying and Selling Orders of Different

Principals; Execution of, for and Between Principals

Introduction

As described above in II.A.7, regulation 1.39 permits the member of

a contract market to execute simultaneous buy and sell orders for the

same contract on behalf of different principals if the orders are

executed on the exchange and subject to certain procedures. The

amendments to this rule incorporate SEFs and swaps.

The amendments also delete language barring cross trades; such

trades are no longer defined under 4c(a) as amended by DFA. This latter

amendment is made pursuant to the DFA without the exercise of

Commission discretion and therefore is beyond the scope of

consideration in this section.

Benefits

Under CEA Section 5(d)(9), DCMs have an obligation to provide a

competitive, open, and efficient market. If a member were to match two

orders of its own customers without first making it available to the

broader market through the steps required in regulation 1.39, the trade

would be neither open nor competitive. The trade would, thus, be open

to the risk of non-competitive pricing, which could harm one of the two

customers involved in the trade and would, at least minimally, detract

from price discovery. By requiring that bids or offers related to the

member's customer positions are made available to other parties, the

rule ensures that they are open and that a member only matches one

customer against another in a trade if the terms of that trade are

competitive. This protects each customer and also promotes effective

price discovery. Incorporating SEFs into regulation Sec. 1.39 extends

the same benefits to SEF members, providing improved price discovery,

protection for SEF members' customers, and promoting integrity of the

financial markets.

Costs

In order to comply with the rules, a SEF member will be required to

take certain steps before executing one customer's order against

another customer's order. Those additional steps include first offering

its customers' bid and offer to the other members of the SEF through

open outcry or submission to an electronic platform. Whether its

customers' orders are filled against others in the market or against

one another, by offering the trade through the exchange the member will

be subject to some fees imposed by the exchange that they would not

have otherwise experienced. The fees vary significantly based on the

market and product. In addition, the requirement that a SEF record

these transactions in a manner that ``shows all transaction details

required to be captured by the Act, Commission rule, or regulation''

will create additional data capture costs for the SEF. The Commission

estimates that the cost will be approximately $17.00 per transaction

and storage costs of less than $1 per record.\137\

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

\137\ The estimates assume an office services supervisor spends

between 0.1 per transaction. The average salary for an office

services supervisor is $165.25/hour [($61,776 per year)/(2,000 hours

per year) * 5.35 = $165.25 per hour]. 0.1 * $165.25 = $16.52.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

[[Page 66314]]

Section 1.40 Crop, Market Information Letters, Reports

Introduction

As described above in II.A.8, the changes to Sec. 1.40 incorporate

members of a SEF into the requirement that such entities provide to the

Commission copies of any circular, telecommunication, or report that

they publish or circulate through other entities concerning crop

conditions, or market conditions that would tend to affect the price of

any commodity.

Benefits

Regulation 1.40 addresses the need for the Commission to have

access to any published or circulated information about market-

affecting commodity prices for the prevention and/or identification of

manipulative behavior such as false reporting. The benefit of extending

regulation 1.40 to members of a SEF is that it will give the Commission

the same ability to prevent and/or identify similar manipulative

activities in connection with any commodity prices underlying the swap

transactions that will be executed on a SEF.

Costs

The requirement will create de minimis costs for members of a SEF

related to printing and postage costs for one copy of such

communications when the Commission requests a copy. Such requests are

infrequent on a per entity basis and therefore the Commission does not

expect most entities to bear such costs frequently.

Section 1.59 Activities of Self-Regulatory Organizations Employees,

etc.

Introduction

Regulation 1.59 imposes restrictions on employees and governing

board members of SROs that prevent them from disclosing or trading in

any contracts traded or cleared by the employing contract market, or in

any related commodity interest. Moreover, it prevents such persons from

trading on the basis of material non-public information. As discussed

above in II.A.9, the Commission is amending regulation 1.59 to include

SEFs and swaps.

Benefits

By preventing employees and governing board members from trading in

contracts traded or cleared by their employing exchange or other

related commodity interests, the rule helps to prevent conflicts of

interest that might otherwise incent employees of an exchange to

perform their duties in a way that benefits their own investments

rather than benefiting the members of the exchange and the public more

generally. In doing so, the rule promotes the integrity of financial

markets. Moreover, the rule prevents employees and governing board

members from trading to their own advantage, using material non-public

information. In doing so, the rule protects other market participants

that would be on the opposite side of such trades, and would be

disadvantaged by not having access to the same material non-public

information.

Costs

The amendments adding SEFs and swaps to the entities and

instruments referenced in this rule will, as stated above, prevent

employees and governing board members of SROs from investing in certain

instruments. There will, therefore, be opportunity costs to those

employees. The Commission cannot quantify those opportunity costs

because it does not have data adequate to determine what investments

employees might have made without such restrictions, what return they

would expect on those investments compared to their existing

investments, or the amount of money such employees have invested.

However, the Commission believes that guarding against conflicts of

interest at the SROs is an important step to maintaining integrity in

the financial markets.

Section 1.63 Service on Self-Regulatory Organization Governing Boards

or Committees by Persons With Disciplinary Histories

Introduction

Prior to the amendments adopted in this rule, regulation 1.63

required SROs to maintain a schedule listing all rule violations which

constitute disciplinary offences, to submit that schedule to the

Commission and to post it in a public place. This final rule amends the

rule to specify that the public place in which the SROs must post the

schedule is the SRO's Web site.\138\

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

\138\ Sec. 1.63(d).

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Benefits

The amendments to regulation 1.63 promote integrity in the

financial markets by ensuring that the information contained in the

schedule is posted in a public place that fulfills the intent of the

obligation, namely, that the SRO can provide notice to members and the

general public.

Costs

Many SROs likely already post the schedules on their Web sites. To

the extent that SROs were not previously posting the schedule to their

Web sites, they will bear the costs associated with posting schedules

on their Web sites. However, this cost will be offset by eliminating

the need to post the schedule in whatever alternative public place the

SRO was previously using. The Commission estimates that the incremental

cost is between $18.00 and $220.00.\139\

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

\139\ Calculations assume that posting the notice will require 5

to 60 minutes of work by non-senior IT personnel. The average salary

for a programmer is $220.74/hour [($82,518 per year)/(2,000 hours

per year) * 5.35 = $220.74 per hour]. 5/60 * $220.74 = $18.40; 60/60

* $220.74 = $220.74.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Section 1.67 Notification of Final Disciplinary Action Involving

Financial Harm to a Customer

Introduction

This rule adds that upon any final disciplinary action in which a

SEF finds that a member has committed a rule violation, which involved

a transaction for a customer that resulted in financial harm to the

customer, a SEF, like a DCM, must provide written notice to such member

of the disciplinary action taken against that member. This rule

additionally requires members of SEFs, like members of DCMs, to provide

written notice of the disciplinary action to the customer upon receipt

of such notice from the SEF.

Benefits

By requiring members of a SEF to communicate disciplinary actions

taken against them to the customers that were impacted by the

activities leading to such disciplinary action, the rule promotes

integrity in the financial markets. Customers harmed by a member's

actions will, if they choose, have an opportunity to bring legal action

against the member that has caused financial harm to them and may also

choose to take their business to another member. Both consequences are

enabled by the rule, and both serve as an incentive to SEF members to

avoid any activity that would harm their customers.

Costs

This amendment is an extension of previously existing regulations

that now apply to SEFs as well as DCMs. The costs to SEFs will likely

be on par with those to DCMs and will be minimal, covering only the

cost of communicating disciplinary actions to members. The Commission

estimates

[[Page 66315]]

that such notification will cost the SEF approximately $350.00 per

notification because appropriate personnel will have to draft and send

the required communication.

Sections 15.05, 18.05, 21.03, 36.1, 36.2, 36.3, Appendix A to Part 36,

and Appendix B to Part 36

Introduction

As described in II.A.15.D, DFA eliminated ECMs and EBOTs and

provided a grandfather relief provision for such entities. The

amendments here remove references to the sections of the CEA that were

deleted by DFA and insert reference to the Grandfather Relief Orders

issued by the Commission.

ECMs and EBOTs are allowed to continue operating as such during the

period provided by the Grandfather Relief Orders, creating benefits for

those entities that intend to register with the Commission as SEFs, and

that wish to continue operating as ECMs or EBOTs until they are able to

make such registration. However, those benefits are conferred by the

Act and the Grandfather Relief Order. The changes here are merely

technical edits to ensure that the regulations reflect the changes to

the CEA that were made by DFA. Therefore, there are no costs or

benefits associated with these changes.

Parts 140 and 145

Introduction

As discussed above in II.A.15.E, the changes to parts 140 and 145

incorporate SEFs and SDRs into existing Commission regulations. The

proposed changes would: (1) Facilitate the disclosure of confidential

information to SEFs and SDRs in order to effectuate the purposes of the

CEA; (2) facilitate publication of information in the Federal Register

related to the applications for registration of SEFs and SDRs as well

as new rules and rule amendments that require additional time to

analyze; (3) include SEFs and SDRs in the category of registered

entities that may petition the Commission for exemptive relief and no-

action interpretive letters; (4) add SEFs and SDRs to the list of

entities from which Commission members and employees may not accept

employment or compensation; and (5) expand the definition of

``submitter'' by adding SEFs and SDRs to the list of registered

entities to which a person's confidential information has been

submitted and which, in turn, submit that information to the

Commission, and also allows such individuals to request confidential

treatment under Sec. 145.9.

Benefits

The amendments described above create the following benefits: (1)

By facilitating disclosure of confidential information to SEFs and

SDRs, they assist the Commission in performing its regulatory role with

respect to swaps, thus providing additional protection to swap market

participants, promoting the integrity of financial markets, and

promoting protection for the public. (2) Facilitating publication of

information in the Federal Register related to registration

applications for prospective SEFs and SDRs as well as new rule

amendments, will assist the Commission when obtaining additional

information from the public in order to ensure that its determinations

regarding such applications and rules are well-informed. (3) Including

SEFs and SDRs in the category of entities that may petition for

exemptive relief and no-action interpretive letters gives these

entities the opportunity to pursue individualized treatment with

respect to Commission regulations in circumstances where they believe

such treatment is appropriate, which in turn, gives the Commission the

opportunity to grant such relief or to issue a no-action interpretive

letter if it believes doing so is not contrary to the public interest

or the intent of the regulations for which such relief is sought.

(4) Adding SEFs and SDRs to the list of registered entities from

which Commission members and employees may not accept employment or

compensation prevents conflicts of interest and in so doing promotes

the Commission's ability to protect market participants and the public

as well as to promote the integrity of the financial markets. (5) The

changes ensure that personal information submitted to SEFs and SDRs is

subject to the same protections under the Commission's regulations as

personal information submitted to other registered entities.

Costs

SEFs and SDRs may bear some cost due to their obligation to submit

personal information that they receive to the Commission. Such

submissions will likely be automated and therefore the SEFs and SDRs

will bear an initial cost that is necessary to modify their systems to

submit the required information, and an ongoing cost to submit it when

required. The Commission estimates that the initial cost is between

$2,100 and $10,000,\140\ and the ongoing cost is between $230 and $460

per month.\141\

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

\140\ This estimates 2-4 hours from a compliance attorney and

10-40 hours from IT personnel. The average salary for a compliance

attorney is $351.24/hour [($131,303 per year)/(2000 hours per year)

* 5.35 = $351.24 per hour]. The average salary for a programmer is

$220.74/hour [($82,518 per year)/(2,000 hours per year) * 5.35 =

$220.74 per hour].

\141\ This estimates 2-4 hours from a compliance attorney and

10-40 hours from IT personnel. The average salary for a compliance

attorney is $351.24/hour [($131,303 per year)/(2000 hours per year)

* 5.35 = $351.24 per hour]. The average salary for a programmer is

$220.74/hour [($82,518 per year)/(2,000 hours per year) * 5.35 =

$220.74 per hour].

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

The other amendments do not impose affirmative obligations on

market participants and therefore do not create costs for them or the

public.

List of Subjects

17 CFR Part 1

Agricultural commodity, Agriculture, Brokers, Committees, Commodity

futures, Conflicts of interest, Consumer protection, Definitions,

Designated contract markets, Directors, Major swap participants,

Minimum financial requirements for intermediaries, Reporting and

recordkeeping requirements, Swap dealers, Swaps.

17 CFR Part 4

Advertising, Brokers, Commodity futures, Commodity pool operators,

Commodity trading advisors, Consumer protection, Reporting and

recordkeeping requirements, Swaps.

17 CFR Part 5

Bulk transfers, Commodity pool operators, Commodity trading

advisors, Consumer protection, Customer's money, Securities and

property, Definitions, Foreign exchange, Minimum financial and

reporting requirements, Prohibited transactions in retail foreign

exchange, Recordkeeping requirements, Retail foreign exchange dealers,

Risk assessment, Special calls, Trading practices.

17 CFR Part 7

Commodity futures, Consumer protection, Registered entity.

17 CFR Part 8

Commodity futures, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.

17 CFR Part 15

Brokers, Commodity futures, Reporting and recordkeeping

requirements, Electronic trading facility.

17 CFR Part 16

Commodity futures, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.

17 CFR Part 18

Commodity futures, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements,

Grandfather relief order.

[[Page 66316]]

17 CFR Part 21

Brokers, Commodity futures, Reporting and recordkeeping

requirements, Grandfather relief order.

17 CFR Part 22

Brokers, Clearing, Consumer protection, Reporting and recordkeeping

requirements, Swaps.

17 CFR Part 36

Commodity futures, Electronic trading facility, Eligible commercial

entities, Eligible contract participants, Federal financial regulatory

authority, Principal-to-principal, Special calls, Systemic market

event.

17 CFR Part 38

Commodity futures, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.

17 CFR Part 41

Brokers, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Security futures

products.

17 CFR Part 140

Authority delegations (Government agencies), Conflict of interests,

Organizations and functions (Government agencies).

17 CFR Part 145

Confidential business information, Freedom of information.

17 CFR Part 155

Brokers, Commodity futures, Consumer protection, Reporting and

recordkeeping requirements, Swaps.

17 CFR Part 166

Brokers, Commodity futures, Consumer protection, Reporting and

recordkeeping requirements, Swaps.

For the reasons stated in the preamble, under the authority of 7

U.S.C. 1 et seq., the Commodity Futures Trading Commission hereby

amends Chapter I of Title 17 of the Code of Federal Regulations as set

forth below:

PART 1--GENERAL REGULATIONS UNDER THE COMMODITY EXCHANGE ACT

0

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

Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1a, 2, 2a, 5, 6, 6a, 6b, 6c, 6d, 6e, 6f,

6g, 6h, 6i, 6k, 6l, 6m, 6n, 6o, 6p, 6r, 6s, 7, 7a-1, 7a-2, 7b, 7b-3,

8, 9, 10a, 12, 12a, 12c, 13a, 13a-1, 16, 16a, 19, 21, 23, and 24, as

amended by Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and

Consumer Protection Act, Pub. L. 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376 (2010).

0

2. Amend Sec. 1.3 by:

0

a. Revising paragraphs (a), (b), (e), (g), (h), (k), (n), (p), (q),

(r), (s), (t), (x), (y) introductory text, (y)(1), (y)(2) introductory

text, (y)(2)(iii)(B), (y)(2)(iii)(C), (y)(2)(v)(B), (y)(2)(v)(C),

(y)(2)(vii), (y)(2)(viii), (aa)(1)(i), (aa)(2)(i), (aa)(5), (bb), (cc),

(ee), (ff), (gg), (ii), (kk), (mm)(1), (mm)(2) introductory text,

(mm)(2)(i), (nn), (oo), (pp), (rr)(2), (ss), (tt), (vv), (xx), and

(yy);

0

b. Removing and reserving paragraphs (jj), (ll) and (uu); and

0

c. Adding paragraphs (k), (cccc), (dddd), (eeee), (ffff), (gggg),

(hhhh), (iiii), (jjjj), (kkkk), (llll), (mmmm), (nnnn), (oooo), (pppp),

(qqqq), (rrrr), and (ssss) to read as follows:

Sec. 1.3 Definitions.

* * * * *

(a) Board of Trade. This term means an organized exchange or other

trading facility.

(b) Business day. This term means any day other than a Sunday or

holiday. In all notices required by the Act or by the rules and

regulations in this chapter to be given in terms of business days the

rule for computing time shall be to exclude the day on which notice is

given and include the day on which shall take place the act of which

notice is given.

* * * * *

(e) Commodity. This term means and includes wheat, cotton, rice,

corn, oats, barley, rye, flaxseed, grain sorghums, millfeeds, butter,

eggs, Irish potatoes, wool, wool tops, fats and oils (including lard,

tallow, cottonseed oil, peanut oil, soybean oil, and all other fats and

oils), cottonseed meal, cottonseed, peanuts, soybeans, soybean meal,

livestock, livestock products, and frozen concentrated orange juice,

and all other goods and articles, except onions (as provided by the

first section of Pub. L. 85-839) and motion picture box office receipts

(or any index, measure, value or data related to such receipts), and

all services, rights and interests (except motion picture box office

receipts, or any index, measure, value or data related to such

receipts) in which contracts for future delivery are presently or in

the future dealt in.

* * * * *

(g) Institutional customer. This term has the same meaning as

``eligible contract participant'' as defined in section 1a(18) of the

Act.

(h) Contract market; designated contract market. These terms mean a

board of trade designated by the Commission as a contract market under

the Act and in accordance with the provisions of part 38 of this

chapter.

* * * * *

(k) Customer. This term means any person who uses a futures

commission merchant, introducing broker, commodity trading advisor, or

commodity pool operator as an agent in connection with trading in any

commodity interest; Provided, however, an owner or holder of a

proprietary account as defined in paragraph (y) of this section shall

not be deemed to be a customer within the meaning of section 4d of the

Act, the regulations that implement sections 4d and 4f of the Act and

Sec. 1.35, and such an owner or holder of such a proprietary account

shall otherwise be deemed to be a customer within the meaning of the

Act and Sec. Sec. 1.37 and 1.46 and all other sections of these rules,

regulations, and orders which do not implement sections 4d and 4f of

the Act.

* * * * *

(n) Floor broker. This term means any person:

(1) Who, in or surrounding any pit, ring, post or other place

provided by a contract market for the meeting of persons similarly

engaged, shall purchase or sell for any other person--

(i) Any commodity for future delivery, security futures product, or

swap; or

(ii) Any commodity option authorized under section 4c of the Act;

or

(2) Who is registered with the Commission as a floor broker.

* * * * *

(p) Futures commission merchant. This term means:

(1) Any individual, association, partnership, corporation, or

trust--

(i) Who is engaged in soliciting or in accepting orders for the

purchase or sale of any commodity for future delivery; a security

futures product; a swap; any agreement, contract, or transaction

described in section 2(c)(2)(C)(i) or section 2(c)(2)(D)(i) of the Act;

a commodity option authorized under section 4c of the Act; a leverage

transaction authorized under section 19 of the Act; or acting as a

counterparty in any agreement, contract or transaction described in

section 2(c)(2)(C)(i) or section 2(c)(2)(D)(i) of the Act; and

(ii) Who, in connection with any of these activities accepts any

money, securities, or property (or extends credit in lieu thereof) to

margin, guarantee, or secure any trades or contracts that result or may

result therefrom; and

(2) Any person that is registered as a futures commission merchant.

(q) Member. This term means:

(1) An individual, association, partnership, corporation, or

trust--

(i) Owning or holding membership in, or admitted to membership

representation on, a registered entity; or

(ii) Having trading privileges on a registered entity.

[[Page 66317]]

(2) A participant in an alternative trading system that is

designated as a contract market pursuant to section 5f of the Act is

deemed a member of the contract market for purposes of transactions in

security futures products through the contract market.

(r) Net equity. (1) For futures and commodity option positions,

this term means the credit balance which would be obtained by combining

the margin balance of any person with the net profit or loss, if any,

accruing on the open futures or commodity option positions of such

person.

(2) For swap positions other than commodity option positions, this

term means the credit balance which would be obtained by combining the

margin balance of any person with the net profit or loss, if any,

accruing on the open swap positions of such person.

(s) Net deficit. (1) For futures and commodity option positions,

this term means the debit balance which would be obtained by combining

the margin balance of any person with the net profit or loss, if any,

accruing on the open futures or commodity option positions of such

person.

(2) For swap positions other than commodity option positions, this

term means the debit balance which would be obtained by combining the

margin balance of any person with the net profit or loss, if any,

accruing on the open swap positions of such person.

(t) Open contracts. This term means:

(1) Positions in contracts of purchase or sale of any commodity

made by or for any person on or subject to the rules of a board of

trade for future delivery during a specified month or delivery period

that have neither been fulfilled by delivery nor been offset by other

contracts of purchase or sale in the same commodity and delivery month;

(2) Positions in commodity option transactions that have not

expired, been exercised, or offset; and

(3) Positions in Cleared Swaps, as Sec. 22.1 of this chapter

defines that term, that have not been fulfilled by delivery; not been

offset; not expired; and not been terminated.

* * * * *

(x) Floor trader. This term means any person:

(1) Who, in or surrounding any pit, ring, post or other place

provided by a contract market for the meeting of persons similarly

engaged, purchases, or sells solely for such person's own account--

(i) Any commodity for future delivery, security futures product, or

swap; or

(ii) Any commodity option authorized under section 4c of the Act;

or

(2) Who is registered with the Commission as a floor trader.

(y) Proprietary account. This term means a commodity futures,

commodity option, or swap trading account carried on the books and

records of an individual, a partnership, corporation or other type of

association:

(1) For one of the following persons, or

(2) Of which ten percent or more is owned by one of the following

persons, or an aggregate of ten percent or more of which is owned by

more than one of the following persons:

* * * * *

(iii) * * *

(B) The handling of the trades of customers or customer funds of

such partnership,

(C) The keeping of records pertaining to the trades of customers or

customer funds of such partnership, or

* * * * *

(v) * * *

(B) The handling of the trades of customers or customer funds of

such individual, partnership, corporation or association,

(C) The keeping of records pertaining to the trades of customers or

customer funds of such individual, partnership, corporation or

association, or

* * * * *

(vii) A business affiliate that directly or indirectly controls

such individual, partnership, corporation or association; or

(viii) A business affiliate that, directly or indirectly is

controlled by or is under common control with, such individual,

partnership, corporation or association. Provided, however, That an

account owned by any shareholder or member of a cooperative association

of producers, within the meaning of section 6a of the Act, which

association is registered as a futures commission merchant and carries

such account on its records, shall be deemed to be an account of a

customer and not a proprietary account of such association, unless the

shareholder or member is an officer, director or manager of the

association.

* * * * *

(aa) * * *

(1) * * *

(i) The solicitation or acceptance of customers' orders (other than

in a clerical capacity) or

* * * * *

(2) * * *

(i) The solicitation or acceptance of customers' orders (other than

in a clerical capacity) or

* * * * *

(5) A leverage transaction merchant as a partner, officer,

employee, consultant, or agent (or any natural person occupying a

similar status or performing similar functions), in any capacity which

involves:

(i) The solicitation or acceptance of leverage customers' orders

(other than in a clerical capacity) for leverage transactions as

defined in Sec. 31.4(x) of this chapter, or

(ii) The supervision of any person or persons so engaged.

* * * * *

(bb)(1) Commodity trading advisor. This term means any person who,

for compensation or profit, engages in the business of advising others,

either directly or through publications, writings or electronic media,

as to the value of or the advisability of trading in any contract of

sale of a commodity for future delivery, security futures product, or

swap; any agreement, contract or transaction described in section

2(c)(2)(C)(i) or section 2(c)(2)(D)(i) of the Act; any commodity option

authorized under section 4c of the Act; any leverage transaction

authorized under section 19 of the Act; any person registered with the

Commission as a commodity trading advisor; or any person, who, for

compensation or profit, and as part of a regular business, issues or

promulgates analyses or reports concerning any of the foregoing. The

term does not include:

(i) Any bank or trust company or any person acting as an employee

thereof;

(ii) Any news reporter, news columnist, or news editor of the print

or electronic media or any lawyer, accountant, or teacher;

(iii) Any floor broker or futures commission merchant;

(iv) The publisher or producer of any print or electronic data of

general and regular dissemination, including its employees;

(v) The named fiduciary, or trustee, of any defined benefit plan

which is subject to the provisions of the Employee Retirement Income

Security Act of 1974, or any fiduciary whose sole business is to advise

that plan;

(vi) Any contract market; and

(vii) Such other persons not within the intent of this definition

as the Commission may specify by rule, regulation or order: Provided,

That the furnishing of such services by the foregoing persons is solely

incidental to the conduct of their business or profession:

Provided further, That the Commission, by rule or regulation, may

include within this definition, any person advising as to the value of

commodities or issuing reports or

[[Page 66318]]

analyses concerning commodities, if the Commission determines that such

rule or regulation will effectuate the purposes of this provision.

(2) Client. This term, as it relates to a commodity trading

advisor, means any person:

(i) To whom a commodity trading advisor provides advice, for

compensation or profit, either directly or through publications,

writings, or electronic media, as to the value of, or the advisability

of trading in, any contract of sale of a commodity for future delivery,

security futures product or swap; any agreement, contract or

transaction described in section 2(c)(2)(C)(i) or section 2(c)(2)(D)(i)

of the Act; any commodity option authorized under section 4c of the

Act; any leverage transaction authorized under section 19 of the Act;

or

(ii) To whom, for compensation or profit, and as part of a regular

business, the commodity trading advisor issues or promulgates analyses

or reports concerning any of the activities referred to in paragraph

(bb)(2)(i) of this section. The term ``client'' includes, without

limitation, any subscriber of a commodity trading advisor.

(cc) Commodity pool operator. This term means any person engaged in

a business which is of the nature of a commodity pool, investment

trust, syndicate, or similar form of enterprise, and who, in connection

therewith, solicits, accepts, or receives from others, funds,

securities, or property, either directly or through capital

contributions, the sale of stock or other forms of securities, or

otherwise, for the purpose of trading in commodity interests, including

any commodity for future delivery, security futures product, or swap;

any agreement, contract or transaction described in section

2(c)(2)(C)(i) or section 2(c)(2)(D)(i) of the Act; any commodity option

authorized under section 4c of the Act; any leverage transaction

authorized under section 19 of the Act; or any person who is registered

with the Commission as a commodity pool operator, but does not include

such persons not within the intent of this definition as the Commission

may specify by rule or regulation or by order.

* * * * *

(ee) Self-regulatory organization. This term means a contract

market (as defined in Sec. 1.3(h)), a swap execution facility (as

defined in Sec. 1.3(rrrr)), or a registered futures association under

section 17 of the Act.

(ff) Designated self-regulatory organization. This term means:

(1) Self-regulatory organization of which a futures commission

merchant, an introducing broker, a leverage transaction merchant, a

retail foreign exchange dealer, a swap dealer, or a major swap

participant is a member; or

(2) If a Commission registrant other than a leverage transaction

merchant is a member of more than one self-regulatory organization and

such registrant is the subject of an approved plan under Sec. 1.52,

then a self-regulatory organization delegated the responsibility by

such a plan for monitoring and auditing such registrant for compliance

with the minimum financial and related reporting requirements of the

self-regulatory organizations of which the registrant is a member, and

for receiving the financial reports necessitated by such minimum

financial and related reporting requirements from such registrant; or

(3) If a leverage transaction merchant is a member of more than one

self-regulatory organization and such leverage transaction merchant is

the subject of an approved plan under Sec. 31.28 of this chapter, then

a self-regulatory organization delegated the responsibility by such a

plan for monitoring and auditing such leverage transaction merchant for

compliance with the minimum financial, cover, segregation and sales

practice, and related reporting requirements of the self-regulatory

organizations of which the leverage transaction merchant is a member,

and for receiving the reports necessitated by such minimum financial,

cover, segregation and sales practice, and related reporting

requirements from such leverage transaction merchant.

(gg) Customer funds. This term means, collectively, Cleared Swaps

Customer Collateral and futures customer funds.

* * * * *

(ii) Premium. This term means the amount agreed upon between the

purchaser and seller, or their agents, for the purchase or sale of a

commodity option.

(jj) [Reserved]

(kk) Strike price. This term means the price, per unit, at which a

person may purchase or sell the commodity, swap, or contract of sale of

a commodity for future delivery that is the subject of a commodity

option: Provided, That for purposes of Sec. 1.17, the term strike

price means the total price at which a person may purchase or sell the

commodity, swap, or contract of sale of a commodity for future delivery

that is the subject of a commodity option (i.e., price per unit times

the number of units).

(ll) [Reserved]

(mm) * * *

(1) Any person who, for compensation or profit, whether direct or

indirect:

(i) Is engaged in soliciting or in accepting orders (other than in

a clerical capacity) for the purchase or sale of any commodity for

future delivery, security futures product, or swap; any agreement,

contract or transaction described in section 2(c)(2)(C)(i) or section

2(c)(2)(D)(i) of the Act; any commodity option transaction authorized

under section 4c; or any leverage transaction authorized under section

19; or who is registered with the Commission as an introducing broker;

and

(ii) Does not accept any money, securities, or property (or extend

credit in lieu thereof) to margin, guarantee, or secure any trades or

contracts that result or may result therefrom.

(2) The term introducing broker shall not include:

(i) Any futures commission merchant, floor broker, associated

person, or associated person of a swap dealer or major swap participant

acting in its capacity as such, regardless of whether that futures

commission merchant, floor broker, or associated person is registered

or exempt from registration in such capacity;

* * * * *

(nn) Guarantee agreement. This term means an agreement of guarantee

in the form set forth in part B or C of Form 1-FR, executed by a

registered futures commission merchant or retail foreign exchange

dealer, as appropriate, and by an introducing broker or applicant for

registration as an introducing broker on behalf of an introducing

broker or applicant for registration as an introducing broker in

satisfaction of the alternative adjusted net capital requirement set

forth in Sec. 1.17(a)(1)(iii).

(oo) Leverage transaction merchant. This term means and includes

any individual, association, partnership, corporation, trust or other

person that is engaged in the business of offering to enter into,

entering into or confirming the execution of leverage contracts, or

soliciting or accepting orders for leverage contracts, and who accepts

leverage customer funds (or extends credit in lieu thereof) in

connection therewith.

(pp) Leverage customer funds. This term means all money, securities

and property received, directly or indirectly by a leverage transaction

merchant from, for, or on behalf of leverage customers to margin,

guarantee or secure leverage contracts and all money, securities and

property accruing to such customers as the result of such contracts, or

the

[[Page 66319]]

customers' leverage equity. In the case of a long leverage transaction,

profit or loss accruing to a leverage customer is the difference

between the leverage transaction merchant's current bid price for the

leverage contract and the ask price of the leverage contract when

entered into. In the case of a short leverage transaction, profit or

loss accruing to a leverage customer is the difference between the bid

price of the leverage contract when entered into and the leverage

transaction merchant's current ask price for the leverage contract.

* * * * *

(rr) * * *

(2) In the case of foreign options customers in connection with

open foreign options transactions, money, securities and property

representing premiums paid or received, plus any other funds required

to guarantee or secure open transactions plus or minus any unrealized

gain or loss on such transactions.

(ss) Foreign board of trade. This term means any board of trade,

exchange or market located outside the United States, its territories

or possessions, whether incorporated or unincorporated.

(tt) Electronic signature. This term means an electronic sounds,

symbol, or process attached to or logically associated with a record

and executed or adopted by a person with the intent to sign the record.

(uu) [Reserved]

(vv) Futures account. This term means an account that is maintained

in accordance with the segregation requirements of sections 4d(a) and

4d(b) of the Act and the rules thereunder.

* * * * *

(xx) Foreign broker. This term means any person located outside the

United States, its territories or possessions who is engaged in

soliciting or in accepting orders only from persons located outside the

United States, its territories or possessions for the purchase or sale

of any commodity interest transaction on or subject to the rules of any

designated contract market or swap execution facility and that, in or

in connection with such solicitation or acceptance of orders, accepts

any money, securities or property (or extends credit in lieu thereof)

to margin, guarantee, or secure any trades or contracts that result or

may result therefrom.

(yy) Commodity interest. This term means:

(1) Any contract for the purchase or sale of a commodity for future

delivery;

(2) Any contract, agreement or transaction subject to a Commission

regulation under section 4c or 19 of the Act;

(3) Any contract, agreement or transaction subject to Commission

jurisdiction under section 2(c)(2) of the Act; and

(4) Any swap as defined in the Act, by the Commission, or jointly

by the Commission and the Securities and Exchange Commission.

* * * * *

(cccc) Cleared Swaps Customer. This term has the meaning provided

in Sec. 22.1 of this chapter.

(dddd) Cleared Swaps Customer Account. This term has the meaning

provided in Sec. 22.1 of this chapter.

(eeee) Cleared Swaps Customer Collateral. This term has the meaning

provided in Sec. 22.1 of this chapter.

(ffff) Confirmation. When used in reference to a futures commission

merchant, introducing broker, or commodity trading advisor, this term

means documentation (electronic or otherwise) that memorializes

specified terms of a transaction executed on behalf of a customer. When

used in reference to a swap dealer or major swap participant, this term

has the meaning set forth in Sec. 23.500 of this chapter.

(gggg) Customer Account. This term references both a Cleared Swaps

Customer Account and a Futures Account, as defined by paragraphs (dddd)

and (vv) of this section.

(hhhh) Electronic trading facility. This term means a trading

facility that--

(1) Operates by means of an electronic or telecommunications

network; and

(2) Maintains an automated audit trail of bids, offers, and the

matching of orders or the execution of transactions on the facility.

(iiii) Futures customer. This term means any person who uses a

futures commission merchant, introducing broker, commodity trading

advisor, or commodity pool operator as an agent in connection with

trading in any contract for the purchase of sale of a commodity for

future delivery or any option on such contract; Provided, however, an

owner or holder of a proprietary account as defined in paragraph (y) of

this section shall not be deemed to be a futures customer within the

meaning of sections 4d(a) and 4d(b) of the Act, the regulations that

implement sections 4d and 4f of the Act and Sec. 1.35, and such an

owner or holder of such a proprietary account shall otherwise be deemed

to be a futures customer within the meaning of the Act and Sec. Sec.

1.37 and 1.46 and all other sections of these rules, regulations, and

orders which do not implement sections 4d and 4f of the Act.

(jjjj) Futures customer funds. This term means all money,

securities, and property received by a futures commission merchant or

by a derivatives clearing organization from, for, or on behalf of,

futures customers:

(1) To margin, guarantee, or secure contracts for future delivery

on or subject to the rules of a contract market or derivatives clearing

organization, as the case may be, and all money accruing to such

futures customers as the result of such contracts; and

(2) In connection with a commodity option transaction on or subject

to the rules of a contract market, or derivatives clearing

organization, as the case may be:

(i) To be used as a premium for the purchase of a commodity option

transaction for a futures customer;

(ii) As a premium payable to a futures customer;

(iii) To guarantee or secure performance of a commodity option by a

futures customer; or

(iv) Representing accruals (including, for purchasers of a

commodity option for which the full premium has been paid, the market

value of such commodity option) to a futures customer.

(3) Notwithstanding paragraphs (1) and (2) of this definition, the

term ``futures customer funds'' shall exclude money, securities or

property held to margin, guarantee or secure security futures products

held in a securities account, and all money accruing as the result of

such security futures products.

(kkkk) Order. This term means an instruction or authorization

provided by a customer to a futures commission merchant, introducing

broker or commodity trading advisor regarding trading in a commodity

interest on behalf of the customer.

(llll) Organized exchange. This term means a trading facility

that--

(1) Permits trading--

(i) By or on behalf of a person that is not an eligible contract

participant; or

(ii) By persons other than on a principal-to-principal basis; or

(2) Has adopted (directly or through another nongovernmental

entity) rules that--

(i) Govern the conduct of participants, other than rules that

govern the submission of orders or execution of transactions on the

trading facility; and

(ii) Include disciplinary sanctions other than the exclusion of

participants from trading.

(mmmm) Prudential regulator. This term has the meaning given to the

term in section 1a(39) of the Commodity Exchange Act and includes the

Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve

[[Page 66320]]

System, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, the Federal

Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Farm Credit Administration, and the

Federal Housing Finance Agency, as applicable to the swap dealer or

major swap participant. The term also includes the Federal Deposit

Insurance Corporation, with respect to any financial company as defined

in section 201 of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer

Protection Act or any insured depository institution under the Federal

Deposit Insurance Act, and with respect to each affiliate of any such

company or institution.

(nnnn) Registered entity. This term means:

(1) A board of trade designated as a contract market under section

5 of the Act;

(2) A derivatives clearing organization registered under section 5b

of the Act;

(3) A board of trade designated as a contract market under section

5f of the Act;

(4) A swap execution facility registered under section 5h of the

Act;

(5) A swap data repository registered under section 21 of the Act;

and

(6) With respect to a contract that the Commission determines is a

significant price discovery contract, any electronic trading facility

on which the contract is executed or traded.

(oooo) Registrant. This term means: a commodity pool operator;

commodity trading advisor; futures commission merchant; introducing

broker; leverage transaction merchant; floor broker; floor trader;

major swap participant; retail foreign exchange dealer; or swap dealer

that is subject to these regulations; or an associated person of any of

the foregoing other than an associated person of a swap dealer or major

swap participant.

(pppp) Retail forex customer. This term means a person, other than

an eligible contract participant as defined in section 1a(18) of the

Act, acting on its own behalf and trading in any account, agreement,

contract or transaction described in section 2(c)(2)(B) or 2(c)(2)(C)

of the Act.

(qqqq) Swap data repository. This term means any person that

collects and maintains information or records with respect to

transactions or positions in, or the terms and conditions of, swaps

entered into by third parties for the purpose of providing a

centralized recordkeeping facility for swaps.

(rrrr) Swap execution facility. This term means a trading system or

platform in which multiple participants have the ability to execute or

trade swaps by accepting bids and offers made by multiple participants

in the facility or system, through any means of interstate commerce,

including any trading facility, that--

(1) Facilitates the execution of swaps between persons; and

(2) Is not a designated contract market.

(ssss) Trading facility. This term has the meaning set forth in

section 1a(51) of the Act.

0

3. Revise Sec. 1.4 to read as follows:

Sec. 1.4 Electronic signatures, acknowledgments and verifications.

For purposes of complying with any provision in the Commodity

Exchange Act or the rules or regulations in this Chapter I that

requires a swap transaction to be acknowledged by a swap dealer or

major swap participant or a document to be signed or verified by a

customer of a futures commission merchant or introducing broker, a

retail forex customer of a retail foreign exchange dealer or futures

commission merchant, a pool participant or a client of a commodity

trading advisor, or a counterparty of a swap dealer or major swap

participant, an electronic signature executed by the customer, retail

forex customer, participant, client, counterparty, swap dealer, or

major swap participant will be sufficient, if the futures commission

merchant, retail foreign exchange dealer, introducing broker, commodity

pool operator, commodity trading advisor, swap dealer, or major swap

participant elects generally to accept electronic signatures,

acknowledgments or verifications or another Commission rule permits the

use of electronic signatures for the purposes listed above; Provided,

however, That the electronic signature must comply with applicable

Federal laws and other Commission rules; And, Provided further, That

the futures commission merchant, retail foreign exchange dealer,

introducing broker, commodity pool operator, commodity trading advisor,

swap dealer, or major swap participant must adopt and use reasonable

safeguards regarding the use of electronic signatures, including at a

minimum safeguards employed to prevent alteration of the electronic

record with which the electronic signature is associated, after such

record has been electronically signed.

0

4. Revise paragraph (a)(4) of Sec. 1.16 to read as follows:

Sec. 1.16 Qualifications and reports of accountants.

(a) * * *

(4) Customer. The term ``customer'' means customer (as defined in

Sec. 1.3(k)) and includes a foreign futures or foreign options

customer (as defined in Sec. 30.1(c) of this chapter).

* * * * *

0

5. Amend Sec. 1.17 by:

0

a. Removing and reserving paragraph (a)(1)(ii);

0

b. Removing from paragraph (c)(1)(iii) the term ``physical'' in all

places it appears and adding in its place the term ``commodity'';

0

c. Revising paragraph (c)(5)(ii)(A);

0

d. Removing from paragraph (c)(5)(xi) the term ``physical'' and adding

in its place the term ``commodity''; and

0

e. Revising paragraph (c)(5)(xiii)(C).

The revisions read as follows:

Sec. 1.17 Minimum financial requirements for futures commission

merchants and introducing brokers.

(a)(1)(i) * * *

(ii) [Reserved]

* * * * *

(c) * * *

(5) * * *

(ii) * * *

(A) Inventory which is currently registered as deliverable on a

contract market and covered by an open futures contract or by a

commodity option on a physical commodity--No charge.

* * * * *

(xiii) * * *

(C) A foreign broker that has been granted comparability relief

pursuant to Sec. 30.10 of this chapter, Provided, however, that the

amount of the unsecured receivable not subject to the five percent

capital charge is no greater than 150 percent of the current amount

required to maintain futures and options positions in accounts with the

foreign broker, or 100 percent of such greater amount required to

maintain futures and option positions in the accounts at any time

during the previous six-month period, and Provided, that, in the case

of the foreign futures or foreign options secured amount, as Sec.

1.3(rr) defines such term, such account is treated in accordance with

the special requirements of the applicable Commission order issued

under Sec. 30.10 of this chapter.

* * * * *

0

6. Revise Sec. 1.20 to read as follows:

Sec. 1.20 Futures customer funds to be segregated and separately

accounted for.

(a) All futures customer funds shall be separately accounted for

and segregated as belonging to futures customers. Such futures customer

funds when deposited with any bank, trust company, derivatives clearing

organization or another futures commission merchant shall be deposited

under an account name which clearly identifies them as

[[Page 66321]]

such and shows that they are segregated as required by sections 4d(a)

and 4d(b) of the Act and this part. Each registrant shall obtain and

retain in its files for the period provided in Sec. 1.31 a written

acknowledgment from such bank, trust company, derivatives clearing

organization, or futures commission merchant, that it was informed that

the futures customer funds deposited therein are those of futures

customers and are being held in accordance with the provisions of the

Act and this part: Provided, however, that an acknowledgment need not

be obtained from a derivatives clearing organization that has adopted

and submitted to the Commission rules that provide for the segregation

as futures customer funds, in accordance with all relevant provisions

of the Act and the rules and orders promulgated thereunder, of all

funds held on behalf of futures customers. Under no circumstances shall

any portion of futures customer funds be obligated to a derivatives

clearing organization, any member of a contract market, a futures

commission merchant, or any depository except to purchase, margin,

guarantee, secure, transfer, adjust or settle trades, contracts or

commodity option transactions of futures customers. No person,

including any derivatives clearing organization or any depository, that

has received futures customer funds for deposit in a segregated

account, as provided in this section, may hold, dispose of, or use any

such funds as belonging to any person other than the futures customers

of the futures commission merchant which deposited such funds.

(b) All futures customer funds received by a derivatives clearing

organization from a member of the derivatives clearing organization to

purchase, margin, guarantee, secure or settle the trades, contracts or

commodity options of the clearing member's futures customers and all

money accruing to such futures customers as the result of trades,

contracts or commodity options so carried shall be separately accounted

for and segregated as belonging to such futures customers, and a

derivatives clearing organization shall not hold, use or dispose of

such futures customer funds except as belonging to such futures

customers. Such futures customer funds when deposited in a bank or

trust company shall be deposited under an account name which clearly

shows that they are the futures customer funds of the futures customers

of clearing members, segregated as required by sections 4d(a) and 4d(b)

of the Act and these regulations. The derivatives clearing organization

shall obtain and retain in its files for the period provided by Sec.

1.31 an acknowledgment from such bank or trust company that it was

informed that the futures customer funds deposited therein are those of

futures customers of its clearing members and are being held in

accordance with the provisions of the Act and these regulations.

(c) Each futures commission merchant shall treat and deal with the

futures customer funds of a futures customer as belonging to such

futures customer. All futures customer funds shall be separately

accounted for, and shall not be commingled with the money, securities

or property of a futures commission merchant or of any other person, or

be used to secure or guarantee the trades, contracts or commodity

options, or to secure or extend the credit, of any person other than

the one for whom the same are held: Provided, however, That futures

customer funds treated as belonging to the futures customers of a

futures commission merchant may for convenience be commingled and

deposited in the same account or accounts with any bank or trust

company, with another person registered as a futures commission

merchant, or with a derivatives clearing organization, and that such

share thereof as in the normal course of business is necessary to

purchase, margin, guarantee, secure, transfer, adjust, or settle the

trades, contracts or commodity options of such futures customers or

resulting market positions, with the derivatives clearing organization

or with any other person registered as a futures commission merchant,

may be withdrawn and applied to such purposes, including the payment of

premiums to option grantors, commissions, brokerage, interest, taxes,

storage and other fees and charges, lawfully accruing in connection

with such trades, contracts or commodity options: Provided further,

That futures customer funds may be invested in instruments described in

Sec. 1.25.

0

7. Revise Sec. 1.21 to read as follows:

Sec. 1.21 Care of money and equities accruing to futures customers.

All money received directly or indirectly by, and all money and

equities accruing to, a futures commission merchant from any

derivatives clearing organization or from any clearing member or from

any member of a contract market incident to or resulting from any

trade, contract or commodity option made by or through such futures

commission merchant on behalf of any futures customer shall be

considered as accruing to such futures customer within the meaning of

the Act and these regulations. Such money and equities shall be treated

and dealt with as belonging to such futures customer in accordance with

the provisions of the Act and these regulations. Money and equities

accruing in connection with futures customers' open trades, contracts,

or commodity options need not be separately credited to individual

accounts but may be treated and dealt with as belonging undivided to

all futures customers having open trades, contracts, or commodity

option positions which if closed would result in a credit to such

futures customers.

0

8. Revise Sec. 1.22 to read as follows:

Sec. 1.22 Use of futures customer funds restricted.

No futures commission merchant shall use, or permit the use of, the

futures customer funds of one futures customer to purchase, margin, or

settle the trades, contracts, or commodity options of, or to secure or

extend the credit of, any person other than such futures customer.

Futures customer funds shall not be used to carry trades or positions

of the same futures customer other than in commodities or commodity

options traded through the facilities of a contract market.

0

9. Revise Sec. 1.23 to read as follows:

Sec. 1.23 Interest of futures commission merchant in segregated

futures customer funds; additions and withdrawals.

The provisions in section 4d(a) and 4d(b) of the Act and the

provision in Sec. 1.20(c), which prohibit the commingling of futures

customer funds with the funds of a futures commission merchant, shall

not be construed to prevent a futures commission merchant from having a

residual financial interest in the futures customer funds, segregated

as required by the Act and the rules in this part and set apart for the

benefit of futures customers; nor shall such provisions be construed to

prevent a futures commission merchant from adding to such segregated

futures customer funds such amount or amounts of money, from its own

funds or unencumbered securities from its own inventory, of the type

set forth in Sec. 1.25, as it may deem necessary to ensure any and all

futures customers' accounts from becoming undersegregated at any time.

The books and records of a futures commission merchant shall at all

times accurately reflect its interest in the segregated funds. A

futures commission merchant may draw upon such segregated funds to its

own order, to the extent of its actual interest therein, including the

[[Page 66322]]

withdrawal of securities held in segregated safekeeping accounts held

by a bank, trust company, contract market, derivatives clearing

organization or other futures commission merchant. Such withdrawal

shall not result in the funds of one futures customer being used to

purchase, margin or carry the trades, contracts or commodity options,

or extend the credit of any other futures customer or other person.

0

10. Revise Sec. 1.24 to read as follows:

Sec. 1.24 Segregated funds; exclusions therefrom.

Money held in a segregated account by a futures commission merchant

shall not include: (a) Money invested in obligations or stocks of any

derivatives clearing organization or in memberships in or obligations

of any contract market; or

(b) Money held by any derivatives clearing organization which it

may use for any purpose other than to purchase, margin, guarantee,

secure, transfer, adjust, or settle the contracts, trades, or commodity

options of the futures customers of such futures commission merchant.

0

11. Revise paragraphs (c)(3) and (e) of Sec. 1.25 to read as follows:

Sec. 1.25 Investment of customer funds.

* * * * *

(c) * * *

(3) A futures commission merchant or derivatives clearing

organization shall maintain the confirmation relating to the purchase

in its records in accordance with Sec. 1.31 and note the ownership of

fund shares (by book-entry or otherwise) in a custody account of the

futures commission merchant or derivatives clearing organization in

accordance with Sec. Sec. 1.26 and 22.5 of this chapter. The futures

commission merchant or the derivatives clearing organization shall

obtain the acknowledgment letter required by Sec. Sec. 1.26 and 22.5

of this chapter from an entity that has substantial control over the

fund shares purchased with customer funds and has the knowledge and

authority to facilitate redemption and payment or transfer of the

customer funds. Such entity may include the fund sponsor or depository

acting as custodian for fund shares.

* * * * *

(e) Deposit of firm-owned securities into segregation. A futures

commission merchant shall not be prohibited from directly depositing

unencumbered securities of the type specified in this section, which it

owns for its own account, into a segregated safekeeping account or from

transferring any such securities from a segregated account to its own

account, up to the extent of its residual financial interest in

customers' segregated funds; provided, however, that such investments,

transfers of securities, and disposition of proceeds from the sale or

maturity of such securities are recorded in the record of investments

required to be maintained by Sec. 1.27. All such securities may be

segregated in safekeeping only with a bank, trust company, derivatives

clearing organization, or other registered futures commission merchant.

Furthermore, for purposes of Sec. Sec. 1.25, 1.27, 1.28, and 1.29,

investments permitted by Sec. 1.25 that are owned by the futures

commission merchant and deposited into such segregated account shall be

considered customer funds until such investments are withdrawn from

segregation. Investments permitted by Sec. 1.25 that are owned by the

futures commission merchant and deposited into a segregated account

pursuant to Sec. 1.26 shall be considered futures customer funds until

such investments are withdrawn from segregation. Investments permitted

by Sec. 1.25 that are owned by the futures commission merchant and

deposited into a segregated account pursuant to Sec. 22.5 of this

chapter shall be considered Cleared Swaps Customer Collateral until

such investments are withdrawn from segregation.

* * * * *

0

12. Revise Sec. 1.26 to read as follows:

Sec. 1.26 Deposit of instruments purchased with futures customer

funds.

(a) Each futures commission merchant who invests futures customer

funds in instruments described in Sec. 1.25 shall separately account

for such instruments and segregate such instruments as belonging to

such futures customers. Such instruments, when deposited with a bank,

trust company, derivatives clearing organization or another futures

commission merchant, shall be deposited under an account name which

clearly shows that they belong to futures customers and are segregated

as required by the Act and this part. Each futures commission merchant

upon opening such an account shall obtain and retain in its files an

acknowledgment from such bank, trust company, derivatives clearing

organization or other futures commission merchant that it was informed

that the instruments belong to futures customers and are being held in

accordance with the provisions of the Act and this part. Provided,

however, that an acknowledgment need not be obtained from a derivatives

clearing organization that has adopted and submitted to the Commission

rules that provide for the segregation as futures customer funds, in

accordance with all relevant provisions of the Act and the rules and

orders promulgated thereunder, of all funds held on behalf of futures

customers and all instruments purchased with futures customer funds.

Such acknowledgment shall be retained in accordance with Sec. 1.31.

Such bank, trust company, derivatives clearing organization or other

futures commission merchant shall allow inspection of such obligations

at any reasonable time by representatives of the Commission.

(b) Each derivatives clearing organization which invests money

belonging or accruing to futures customers of its clearing members in

instruments described in Sec. 1.25 shall separately account for such

instruments and segregate such instruments as belonging to such futures

customers. Such instruments, when deposited with a bank or trust

company, shall be deposited under an account name which will clearly

show that they belong to futures customers and are segregated as

required by the Act and this part. Each derivatives clearing

organization upon opening such an account shall obtain and retain in

its files a written acknowledgment from such bank or trust company that

it was informed that the instruments belong to futures customers of

clearing members and are being held in accordance with the provisions

of the Act and this part. Such acknowledgment shall be retained in

accordance with Sec. 1.31. Such bank or trust company shall allow

inspection of such instruments at any reasonable time by

representatives of the Commission.

0

13. Revise paragraph (a) introductory text and paragraph (a)(6) of

Sec. 1.27 to read as follows:

Sec. 1.27 Record of investments.

(a) Each futures commission merchant which invests customer funds,

and each derivatives clearing organization which invests customer funds

of its clearing members' customers, shall keep a record showing the

following:

* * * * *

(6) The date on which such investments were liquidated or otherwise

disposed of and the amount of money or current market value of

securities received on such disposition, if any; and

* * * * *

0

14. Revise Sec. 1.29 to read as follows:

Sec. 1.29 Increment or interest resulting from investment of customer

funds.

The investment of customer funds in instruments described in Sec.

1.25 shall not

[[Page 66323]]

prevent the futures commission merchant or derivatives clearing

organization so investing such funds from receiving and retaining as

its own any increment or interest resulting therefrom.

0

15. Revise Sec. 1.30 to read as follows:

Sec. 1.30 Loans by futures commission merchants; treatment of

proceeds.

Nothing in the regulations in this chapter shall prevent a futures

commission merchant from lending its own funds to customers on

securities and property pledged by such customers, or from repledging

or selling such securities and property pursuant to specific written

agreement with such customers. The proceeds of such loans used to

purchase, margin, guarantee, or secure the trades, contracts, or

commodity options of customers shall be treated and dealt with by a

futures commission merchant as belonging to such customers, in

accordance with and subject to the provisions of the Act and these

regulations.

0

16. Amend Sec. 1.31 by revising paragraphs (a), (b) introductory text,

(b)(2)(iii), and (b)(3)(i), to read as follows:

Sec. 1.31 Books and records; keeping and inspection.

(a)(1) All books and records required to be kept by the Act or by

these regulations shall be kept in their original form (for paper

records) or native file format (for electronic records) for a period of

five years from the date thereof and shall be readily accessible during

the first 2 years of the 5-year period; Provided, however, That records

of any swap or related cash or forward transaction shall be kept until

the termination, maturity, expiration, transfer, assignment, or

novation date of the transaction and for a period of five years after

such date. Records of oral communications kept pursuant to Sec.

23.202(a)(1) and (b)(1) of this chapter shall be kept for a period of

one year. All such books and records shall be open to inspection by any

representative of the Commission or the United States Department of

Justice. For purposes of this section, native file format means an

electronic file that exists in the format in which it was originally

created.

(2) Persons required to keep books and records by the Act or by

these regulations shall produce such records in a form specified by any

representative of the Commission. Such production shall be made, at the

expense of the person required to keep the book or record, to a

Commission representative upon the representative's request. Instead of

furnishing a copy, such person may provide the original book or record

for reproduction, which the representative may temporarily remove from

such person's premises for this purpose. All copies or originals shall

be provided promptly. Upon request, the Commission representative shall

issue a receipt provided by such person for any copy or original book

or record received. At the request of the Commission representative,

such person shall, upon the return thereof, issue a receipt for any

copy or original book or record returned by the representative.

(b) Except as provided in paragraph (d) of this section, books and

records required to be kept by the Act or by these regulations may be

stored on either ``micrographic media'' (as defined in paragraph

(b)(1)(i) of this section) or ``electronic storage media'' (as defined

in paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of this section) for the required time period

under the conditions set forth in this paragraph (b); Provided,

however, For electronic records, such storage media must preserve the

native file format of the electronic records as required by paragraph

(a)(1) of this section.

* * * * *

(2) * * *

(iii) Keep only Commission-required records on the individual

medium employed (e.g., a disk or sheets of microfiche);

* * * * *

(3) * * *

(i) Be ready at all times to provide, and immediately provide at

the expense of the person required to keep such records, copies of such

records on such compatible data processing media as defined in Sec.

15.00(d) of this chapter which any representative of the Commission or

the Department of Justice may request. Records must use a format and

coding structure specified in the request.

* * * * *

0

17. Revise paragraphs (a)(1), (a)(2), (a)(3), and (b) of Sec. 1.32 to

read as follows:

Sec. 1.32 Segregated account; daily computation and record.

(a) * * *

(1) The total amount of futures customer funds on deposit in

segregated accounts on behalf of futures customers;

(2) The amount of such futures customer funds required by the Act

and these regulations to be on deposit in segregated accounts on behalf

of such futures customers; and

(3) The amount of the futures commission merchant's residual

interest in such futures customer funds.

(b) In computing the amount of futures customer funds required to

be in segregated accounts, a futures commission merchant may offset any

net deficit in a particular futures customer's account against the

current market value of readily marketable securities, less applicable

percentage deductions (i.e., ``securities haircuts'') as set forth in

Rule 15c3-1(c)(2)(vi) of the Securities and Exchange Commission (17 CFR

240.15c3-1(c)(2)(vi)), held for the same futures customer's account.

The futures commission merchant must maintain a security interest in

the securities, including a written authorization to liquidate the

securities at the futures commission merchant's discretion, and must

segregate the securities in a safekeeping account with a bank, trust

company, derivatives clearing organization, or another futures

commission merchant. For purposes of this section, a security will be

considered readily marketable if it is traded on a ``ready market'' as

defined in Rule 15c3-1(c)(11)(i) of the Securities and Exchange

Commission (17 CFR 240.15c3-1(c)(11)(i)).

* * * * *

0

18. Amend Sec. 1.33 by:

0

a. Revising paragraphs (a) introductory text, (a)(1) introductory text,

and (a)(1)(iii);

0

b. Removing paragraph (a)(1)(iv);

0

c. Revising paragraphs (a)(2) introductory text, (a)(2)(i), (a)(2)(ii),

and (a)(2)(iv);

0

d. Adding paragraphs (a)(3) and (a)(4);

0

e. Revising paragraph (b) introductory text, and (b)(1);

0

f. Redesignating paragraphs (b)(2) through (b)(4) as paragraphs (b)(3)

through (b)(5);

0

g. Adding a new paragraph (b)(2);

0

h. Revising newly designated paragraphs (b)(3)(i), (b)(3)(iv), (b)(4),

and (b)(5); and

0

i. Revising paragraph (d) introductory text.

The revisions and additions read as follows:

Sec. 1.33 Monthly and confirmation statements.

(a) Monthly statements. Each futures commission merchant must

promptly furnish in writing to each customer, and to each foreign

futures or foreign options customer, as defined by Sec. 30.1 of this

chapter, as of the close of the last business day of each month or as

of any regular monthly date selected, except for accounts in which

there are neither open contracts at the end of the statement period nor

any changes to the account balance since the prior statement period,

but in any event not less frequently than once every three

[[Page 66324]]

months, a statement which clearly shows:

(1) For each commodity futures customer and foreign futures or

foreign options customer position--

* * * * *

(iii) Any futures customer funds or foreign futures or foreign

options secured amount, as defined by Sec. 1.3(rr), carried with the

futures commission merchant.

(2) For each commodity option position and foreign option

position--

(i) All commodity options and foreign options purchased, sold,

exercised, or expired during the monthly reporting period, identified

by underlying futures contract or underlying commodity, strike price,

transaction date, and expiration date;

(ii) The open commodity option and foreign option positions carried

for such customer or foreign futures or foreign options customer as of

the end of the monthly reporting period, identified by underlying

futures contract or underlying commodity, strike price, transaction

date, and expiration date;

* * * * *

(iv) Any related customer funds carried in such customer's

account(s) or any related foreign futures or foreign options secured

amount carried in the account(s) of a foreign futures or foreign

options customer.

(3) For each Cleared Swaps Customer position--

(i) The Cleared Swaps, as Sec. 22.1 of this chapter defines that

term, carried by the futures commission merchant for the Cleared Swaps

Customer;

(ii) The net unrealized profits or losses in all Cleared Swaps

marked to the market;

(iii) Any Cleared Swaps Customer Collateral carried with the

futures commission merchant; and

(4) A detailed accounting of all financial charges and credits to

customers and foreign futures or foreign options customers, during the

monthly reporting period, including all customer funds and any foreign

futures or foreign options secured amount, received from or disbursed

to customers or foreign futures or foreign options customers, as well

as realized profits and losses.

(b) Confirmation statement. Each futures commission merchant must,

not later than the next business day after any commodity interest or

commodity option transaction, including any foreign futures or foreign

options transactions, furnish to each customer or foreign futures or

foreign options customer:

(1) A written confirmation of each commodity futures transaction

caused to be executed by it for the customer.

(2) A written confirmation of each Cleared Swap carried by the

futures commission merchant, containing at least the following

information:

(i) The unique swap identifier, as required by Sec. 45.4(a) of

this chapter, for each Cleared Swap and the date each Cleared Swap was

executed;

(ii) The product name of each Cleared Swap;

(iii) The price at which the Cleared Swap was executed;

(iv) The date of maturity for each Cleared Swap; and

(v) The derivatives clearing organization through which it is

cleared.

(3) A written confirmation of each commodity option transaction,

containing at least the following information:

(i) The customer's account identification number;

* * * * *

(iv) The underlying futures contract or underlying commodity;

* * * * *

(4) Upon the expiration or exercise of any commodity option, a

written confirmation statement thereof, which statement shall include

the date of such occurrence, a description of the option involved, and,

in the case of exercise, the details of the futures or physical

position which resulted therefrom including, if applicable, the final

trading date of the contract for future delivery underlying the option.

(5) Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraphs (b)(1) through

(b)(4) of this section, a commodity interest transaction that is caused

to be executed for a commodity pool need be confirmed only to the

operator of the commodity pool.

* * * * *

(d) Controlled accounts. With respect to any account controlled by

any person other than the customer for whom such account is carried,

each futures commission merchant shall:

* * * * *

0

19. Revise Sec. 1.34 to read as follows:

Sec. 1.34 Monthly record, ``point balance''.

(a) With respect to commodity futures transactions, each futures

commission merchant shall prepare, and retain in accordance with the

requirements of Sec. 1.31, a statement commonly known as a ``point

balance,'' which accrues or brings to the official closing price, or

settlement price fixed by the clearing organization, all open contracts

of customers as of the last business day of each month or of any

regular monthly date selected: Provided, however, That a futures

commission merchant who carries part or all of customers' open

contracts with other futures commission merchants on an ``instruct

basis'' will be deemed to have met the requirements of this section as

to open contracts so carried if a monthly statement is prepared which

shows that the prices and amounts of such contracts long and short in

the customers' accounts are in balance with those in the carrying

futures commission merchants' accounts, and such statements are

retained in accordance with the requirements of Sec. 1.31.

(b) With respect to commodity option transactions, each futures

commission merchant shall prepare, and retain in accordance with the

requirements of Sec. 1.31, a listing in which all open commodity

option positions carried for customers are marked to the market. Such

listing shall be prepared as of the last business day of each month, or

as of any regular monthly date selected, and shall be by put or by

call, by underlying contract for future delivery (by delivery month) or

underlying commodity (by option expiration date), and by strike price.

0

20. Section 1.35 is revised to read as follows:

Sec. 1.35 Records of commodity interest and cash commodity

transactions.

(a) Futures commission merchants, retail foreign exchange dealers,

introducing brokers, and members of designated contract markets or swap

execution facilities. Each futures commission merchant, retail foreign

exchange dealer, introducing broker, and member of a designated

contract market or swap execution facility shall keep full, complete,

and systematic records, which include all pertinent data and memoranda,

of all transactions relating to its business of dealing in commodity

interests and cash commodities. Each futures commission merchant,

retail foreign exchange dealer, introducing broker, and member of a

designated contract market or swap execution facility shall retain the

required records, in accordance with the requirements of Sec. 1.31,

and produce them for inspection and furnish true and correct

information and reports as to the contents or the meaning thereof, when

and as requested by an authorized representative of the Commission or

the United States Department of Justice. Included among such records

shall be all orders (filled, unfilled, or canceled), trading cards,

signature cards, street books, journals, ledgers, canceled checks,

copies of confirmations, copies of statements of purchase and sale, and

all other records, which have been prepared in the course of its

business of dealing in commodity interests and cash

[[Page 66325]]

commodities. Among such records each member of a designated contract

market or swap execution facility must retain and produce for

inspection are all documents on which trade information is originally

recorded, whether or not such documents must be prepared pursuant to

the rules or regulations of either the Commission, the designated

contract market or the swap execution facility. For purposes of this

section, such documents are referred to as ``original source

documents.''

(b) Futures commission merchants, retail foreign exchange dealers,

introducing brokers, and members of designated contract markets and

swap execution facilities: Recording of customers' orders. (1) Each

futures commission merchant, each retail foreign exchange dealer, each

introducing broker, and each member of a designated contract market or

swap execution facility receiving a customer's order that cannot

immediately be entered into a trade matching engine shall immediately

upon receipt thereof prepare a written record of the order including

the account identification, except as provided in paragraph (b)(5) of

this section, and order number, and shall record thereon, by timestamp

or other timing device, the date and time, to the nearest minute, the

order is received, and in addition, for commodity option orders, the

time, to the nearest minute, the order is transmitted for execution.

(2)(i) Each member of a designated contract market who on the floor

of such designated contract market receives a customer's order which is

not in the form of a written record including the account

identification, order number, and the date and time, to the nearest

minute, the order was transmitted or received on the floor of such

designated contract market, shall immediately upon receipt thereof

prepare a written record of the order in non-erasable ink, including

the account identification, except as provided in paragraph (b)(5) of

this section, and order number and shall record thereon, by timestamp

or other timing device, the date and time, to the nearest minute, the

order is received.

(ii) Except as provided in paragraph (b)(3) of this section:

(A) Each member of a designated contract market who on the floor of

such designated contract market receives an order from another member

present on the floor which is not in the form of a written record

shall, immediately upon receipt of such order, prepare a written record

of the order or obtain from the member who placed the order a written

record of the order, in non-erasable ink including the account

identification and order number and shall record thereon, by time-stamp

or other timing device, the date and time, to the nearest minute, the

order is received; or

(B) When a member of a designated contract market present on the

floor places an order, which is not in the form of a written record,

for his own account or an account over which he has control, with

another member of such designated contract market for execution:

(1) The member placing such order immediately upon placement of the

order shall record the order and time of placement to the nearest

minute on a sequentially-numbered trading card maintained in accordance

with the requirements of paragraph (f) of this section;

(2) The member receiving and executing such order immediately upon

execution of the order shall record the time of execution to the

nearest minute on a trading card or other record maintained pursuant to

the requirements of paragraph (f) of this section; and

(3) The member receiving and executing the order shall return such

trading card or other record to the member placing the order. The

member placing the order then must submit together both of the trading

cards or other records documenting such trade to designated contract

market personnel or the clearing member.

(3)(i) The requirements of paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of this section

will not apply if a designated contract market maintains in effect

rules which provide for an exemption where:

(A) A member of a designated contract market places with another

member of such designated contract market an order that is part of a

spread transaction;

(B) The member placing the order personally executes one or more

legs of the spread; and

(C) The member receiving and executing such order immediately upon

execution of the order records the time of execution to the nearest

minute on his trading card or other record maintained in accordance

with the requirements of paragraph (f) of this section.

(ii) Each contract market shall, as part of its trade practice

surveillance program, conduct surveillance for compliance with the

recordkeeping and other requirements under paragraphs (b)(2) and (3) of

this section, and for trading abuses related to the execution of orders

for members present on the floor of the contract market.

(4) Each member of a designated contract market reporting the

execution from the floor of the designated contract market of a

customer's order or the order of another member of the designated

contract market received in accordance with paragraphs (b)(2)(i) or

(b)(2)(ii)(A) of this section, shall record on a written record of the

order, including the account identification, except as provided in

paragraph (b)(5) of this section, and order number, by time-stamp or

other timing device, the date and time to the nearest minute such

report of execution is made. Each member of a designated contract

market shall submit the written records of customer orders or orders

from other designated contract market members to designated contract

market personnel or to the clearing member responsible for the

collection of orders prepared pursuant to this paragraph. The execution

price and other information reported on the order tickets must be

written in non-erasable ink.

(5) Post-execution allocation of bunched orders. Specific customer

account identifiers for accounts included in bunched orders executed on

designated contract markets or swap execution facilities need not be

recorded at time of order placement or upon report of execution if the

requirements of paragraphs (b)(5)(i) through (v) of this section are

met. Specific customer account identifiers for accounts included in

bunched orders involving swaps need not be included in confirmations or

acknowledgments provided by swap dealers or major swap participants

pursuant to Sec. 23.501(a) of this chapter if the requirements of

paragraphs (b)(5)(i) through (v) of this section are met.

(i) Eligible account managers for orders executed on designated

contract markets or swap execution facilities. The person placing and

directing the allocation of an order eligible for post-execution

allocation must have been granted written investment discretion with

regard to participating customer accounts. The following persons shall

qualify as eligible account managers for trades executed on designated

contract markets or swap execution facilities:

(A) A commodity trading advisor registered with the Commission

pursuant to the Act or excluded or exempt from registration under the

Act or the Commission's rules, except for entities exempt under Sec.

4.14(a)(3) of this chapter;

(B) An investment adviser registered with the Securities and

Exchange Commission pursuant to the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 or

with a state pursuant to applicable state law or excluded or exempt

from registration under such Act or applicable state law or rule;

[[Page 66326]]

(C) A bank, insurance company, trust company, or savings and loan

association subject to federal or state regulation;

(D) A foreign adviser that exercises discretionary trading

authority solely over the accounts of non-U.S. persons, as defined in

Sec. 4.7(a)(1)(iv) of this chapter;

(E) A futures commission merchant registered with the Commission

pursuant to the Act; or

(F) An introducing broker registered with the Commission pursuant

to the Act.

(ii) Eligible account managers for orders executed bilaterally. The

person placing and directing the allocation of an order eligible for

post-execution allocation must have been granted written investment

discretion with regard to participating customer accounts. The

following persons shall qualify as eligible account managers for trades

executed bilaterally:

(A) A commodity trading advisor registered with the Commission

pursuant to the Act or excluded or exempt from registration under the

Act or the Commission's rules, except for entities exempt under Sec.

4.14(a)(3) of this chapter;

(B) A futures commission merchant registered with the Commission

pursuant to the Act; or

(C) An introducing broker registered with the Commission pursuant

to the Act.

(iii) Information. Eligible account managers shall make the

following information available to customers upon request:

(A) The general nature of the allocation methodology the account

manager will use;

(B) Whether accounts in which the account manager may have any

interest may be included with customer accounts in bunched orders

eligible for post-execution allocation; and

(C) Summary or composite data sufficient for that customer to

compare its results with those of other comparable customers and, if

applicable and consistent with Sec. 155.3(a)(1) and Sec. 155.4(a)(1)

of this chapter, any account in which the account manager has an

interest.

(iv) Allocation. Orders eligible for post-execution allocation must

be allocated by an eligible account manager in accordance with the

following:

(A) Allocations must be made as soon as practicable after the

entire transaction is executed, but in any event no later than the

following times: For cleared trades, account managers must provide

allocation information to futures commission merchants no later than a

time sufficiently before the end of the day the order is executed to

ensure that clearing records identify the ultimate customer for each

trade. For uncleared trades, account managers must provide allocation

information to the counterparty no later than the end of the calendar

day that the swap was executed.

(B) Allocations must be fair and equitable. No account or group of

accounts may receive consistently favorable or unfavorable treatment.

(C) The allocation methodology must be sufficiently objective and

specific to permit independent verification of the fairness of the

allocations using that methodology by appropriate regulatory and self-

regulatory authorities and by outside auditors.

(v) Records. (A) Eligible account managers shall keep and must make

available upon request of any representative of the Commission, the

United States Department of Justice, or other appropriate regulatory

agency, the information specified in paragraph (b)(5)(iii) of this

section.

(B) Eligible account managers shall keep and must make available

upon request of any representative of the Commission, the United States

Department of Justice, or other appropriate regulatory agency, records

sufficient to demonstrate that all allocations meet the standards of

paragraph (b)(5)(iv) of this section and to permit the reconstruction

of the handling of the order from the time of placement by the account

manager to the allocation to individual accounts.

(C) Futures commission merchants, introducing brokers, or commodity

trading advisors that execute orders or that carry accounts eligible

for post-execution allocation, and members of designated contract

markets or swap execution facilities that execute such orders, must

maintain records that, as applicable, identify each order subject to

post-execution allocation and the accounts to which contracts executed

for such order are allocated.

(D) In addition to any other remedies that may be available under

the Act or otherwise, if the Commission has reason to believe that an

account manager has failed to provide information requested pursuant to

paragraph (b)(5)(v)(A) or (b)(5)(v)(B) of this section, the Commission

may inform in writing any designated contract market, swap execution

facility, swap dealer, or major swap participant, and that designated

contract market, swap execution facility, swap dealer, or major swap

participant shall prohibit the account manager from submitting orders

for execution except for liquidation of open positions and no futures

commission merchant shall accept orders for execution on any designated

contract market, swap execution facility, or bilaterally from the

account manager except for liquidation of open positions.

(E) Any account manager that believes he or she is or may be

adversely affected or aggrieved by action taken by the Commission under

paragraph (b)(5)(v)(D) of this section shall have the opportunity for a

prompt hearing in accordance with the provisions of Sec. 21.03(g) of

this chapter.

(c)(1) Futures commission merchants, introducing brokers, and

members of designated contract markets and swap execution facilities.

Upon request of the designated contract market or swap execution

facility, the Commission, or the United States Department of Justice,

each futures commission merchant, introducing broker, and member of a

designated contract market or swap execution facility shall request

from its customers and, upon receipt thereof, provide to the requesting

body documentation of cash transactions underlying exchanges of futures

or swaps for cash commodities or exchanges of futures or swaps in

connection with cash commodity transactions.

(2) Customers. Each customer of a futures commission merchant,

introducing broker, or member of a designated contract market or swap

execution facility shall create, retain, and produce upon request of

the designated contract market or swap execution facility, the

Commission, or the United States Department of Justice documentation of

cash transactions underlying exchanges of futures or swaps for cash

commodities or exchanges of futures or swaps in connection with cash

commodity transactions.

(3) Contract markets. Every contract market shall adopt rules which

require its members to provide documentation of cash transactions

underlying exchanges of futures for cash commodities or exchanges of

futures in connection with cash commodity transactions upon request of

the contract market.

(4) Documentation. For the purposes of this paragraph (c),

documentation means those documents customarily generated in accordance

with cash market practices which demonstrate the existence and nature

of the underlying cash transactions, including, but not limited to,

contracts, confirmation statements, telex printouts, invoices, and

warehouse receipts or other documents of title.

[[Page 66327]]

(d) Futures commission merchants, retail foreign exchange dealers,

introducing brokers, and members of derivatives clearing organizations

clearing trades executed on designated contract markets and swap

execution facilities. Each futures commission merchant, each retail

foreign exchange dealer, and each member of a derivatives clearing

organization clearing trades executed on a designated contract market

or swap execution facility and, for purposes of paragraph (d)(3) of

this section, each introducing broker, shall, as a minimum requirement,

prepare regularly and promptly, and keep systematically and in

permanent form, the following:

(1) A financial ledger record which will show separately for each

customer all charges against and credits to such customer's account,

including but not limited to customer funds deposited, withdrawn, or

transferred, and charges or credits resulting from losses or gains on

closed transactions;

(2) A record of transactions which will show separately for each

account (including proprietary accounts):

(i) All commodity futures transactions executed for such account,

including the date, price, quantity, market, commodity and future;

(ii) All retail forex transactions executed for such account,

including the date, price, quantity, and currency;

(iii) All commodity option transactions executed for such account,

including the date, whether the transaction involved a put or call,

expiration date, quantity, underlying contract for future delivery or

underlying commodity, strike price, and details of the purchase price

of the option, including premium, mark-up, commission and fees; and

(iv) All swap transactions executed for such account, including the

date, price, quantity, market, commodity, swap, and, if cleared, the

derivatives clearing organization; and

(3) A record or journal which will separately show for each

business day complete details of:

(i) All commodity futures transactions executed on that day,

including the date, price, quantity, market, commodity, future and the

person for whom such transaction was made;

(ii) All retail forex transactions executed on that day for such

account, including the date, price, quantity, currency and the person

who whom such transaction was made;

(iii) All commodity option transactions executed on that day,

including the date, whether the transaction involved a put or call, the

expiration date, quantity, underlying contract for future delivery or

underlying commodity, strike price, details of the purchase price of

the option, including premium, mark-up, commission and fees, and the

person for whom the transaction was made;

(iv) All swap transactions executed on that day, including the

date, price, quantity, market, commodity, swap, the person for whom

such transaction was made, and, if cleared, the derivatives clearing

organization; and

(v) In the case of an introducing broker, the record or journal

required by this paragraph (d)(3) shall also include the futures

commission merchant or retail foreign exchange dealer carrying the

account for which each commodity futures, retail forex, commodity

option, and swap transaction was executed on that day. Provided,

however, that where reproductions on microfilm, microfiche or optical

disk are substituted for hard copy in accordance with the provisions of

Sec. 1.31(b), the requirements of paragraphs (d)(1) and (d)(2) of this

section will be considered met if the person required to keep such

records is ready at all times to provide, and immediately provides in

the same city as that in which such person's commodity futures, retail

forex, commodity option, or swap books and records are maintained, at

the expense of such person, reproduced copies which show the records as

specified in paragraphs (d)(1) and (d)(2) of this section, on request

of any representatives of the Commission or the U.S. Department of

Justice.

(e) Members of derivatives clearing organizations clearing trades

executed on designated contract markets and swap execution facilities.

In the daily record or journal required to be kept under paragraph

(d)(3) of this section, each member of a derivatives clearing

organization clearing trades executed on a designated contract market

or swap execution facility shall also show the floor broker or floor

trader executing each transaction, the opposite floor broker or floor

trader, and the opposite clearing member with whom it was made.

(f) Members of designated contract markets. (1) Each member of a

designated contract market who, in the place provided by the designated

contract market for the meeting of persons similarly engaged, executes

purchases or sales of any commodity for future delivery, commodity

option, or swap on or subject to the rules of such designated contract

market, shall prepare regularly and promptly a trading card or other

record showing such purchases and sales. Such trading card or record

shall show the member's name, the name of the clearing member,

transaction date, time, quantity, and, as applicable, underlying

commodity, contract for future delivery, or swap, price or premium,

delivery month or expiration date, whether the transaction involved a

put or a call, and strike price. Such trading card or other record

shall also clearly identify the opposite floor broker or floor trader

with whom the transaction was executed, and the opposite clearing

member (if such opposite clearing member is made known to the member).

(2) Each member of a designated contract market recording purchases

and sales on trading cards must record such purchases and sales in

exact chronological order of execution on sequential lines of the

trading card without skipping lines between trades; Provided, however,

That if lines remain after the last execution recorded on a trading

card, the remaining lines must be marked through.

(3) Each member of a designated contract market must identify on

his or her trading cards the purchases and sales executed during the

opening and closing periods designated by the designated contract

market.

(4) Trading cards prepared by a member of a designated contract

market must contain:

(i) Pre-printed member identification or other unique identifying

information which would permit the trading cards of one member to be

distinguished from those of all other members;

(ii) Pre-printed sequence numbers to permit the intra-day

sequencing of the cards; and

(iii) Unique and pre-printed identifying information which would

distinguish each of the trading cards prepared by the member from other

such trading cards for no less than a one-week period.

(5) Trading cards prepared by a member of a designated contract

market and submitted pursuant to paragraph (f)(7)(i) of this section

must be time-stamped promptly to the nearest minute upon collection by

either the designated contract market or the relevant clearing member.

(6) Each member of a designated contract market shall be

accountable for all trading cards prepared in exact numerical sequence,

whether or not such trading cards are relied on as original source

documents.

(7) Trading records prepared by a member of a designated contract

market must:

(i) Be submitted to designated contract market personnel or the

clearing member within 15 minutes of designated intervals not to exceed

30

[[Page 66328]]

minutes, commencing with the beginning of each trading session. The

time period for submission of trading records after the close of

trading in each market shall not exceed 15 minutes from the close. Such

documents should nevertheless be submitted as often as is practicable

to the designated contract market or relevant clearing member; and

(ii) Be completed in non-erasable ink. A member may correct any

errors by crossing out erroneous information without obliterating or

otherwise making illegible any of the originally recorded information.

With regard to trading cards only, a member may correct erroneous

information by rewriting the trading card; Provided, however, that the

member must submit a ply of the trading card, or in the absence of

plies the original trading card, that is subsequently rewritten in

accordance with the collection schedule for trading cards and provided

further, that the member is accountable for any trading card that

subsequently is rewritten pursuant to paragraph (f)(6) of this section.

(8) Each member of a designated contract market must use a new

trading card at the beginning of each designated 30-minute interval (or

such lesser interval as may be determined appropriate) or as may be

required pursuant hereto.

(g) Members of derivatives clearing organizations clearing trades

executed on designated contract markets and swap execution facilities.

(1) Each member of a derivatives clearing organization clearing trades

executed on a designated contract market or swap execution facility

shall maintain a single record which shall show for each futures,

option, or swap trade: the transaction date, time, quantity, and, as

applicable, underlying commodity, contract for future delivery, or

swap, price or premium, delivery month or expiration date, whether the

transaction involved a put or a call, strike price, floor broker or

floor trader buying, clearing member buying, floor broker or floor

trader selling, clearing member selling, and symbols indicating the

buying and selling customer types. The customer type indicator shall

show, with respect to each person executing the trade, whether such

person:

(i) Was trading for his or her own account, or an account for which

he or she has discretion;

(ii) Was trading for his or her clearing member's house account;

(iii) Was trading for another member present on the exchange floor,

or an account controlled by such other member; or

(iv) Was trading for any other type of customer.

(2) The record required by this paragraph (g) shall also show, by

appropriate and uniform symbols, any transaction which is made non-

competitively in accordance with the provisions of subpart J of part 38

of this chapter, and trades cleared on dates other than the date of

execution. Except as otherwise approved by the Commission for good

cause shown, the record required by this paragraph (g) shall be

maintained in a format and coding structure approved by the

Commission--

(i) In hard copy or on microfilm as specified in Sec. 1.31, and

(ii) For 60 days in computer-readable form on compatible magnetic

tapes or discs.

0

21. Revise Sec. 1.36 to read as follows:

Sec. 1.36 Record of securities and property received from customers.

(a) Each futures commission merchant and each retail foreign

exchange dealer shall maintain, as provided in Sec. 1.31, a record of

all securities and property received from customers or retail forex

customers in lieu of money to margin, purchase, guarantee, or secure

the commodity interests of such customers or retail forex customers.

Such record shall show separately for each customer or retail forex

customer: A description of the securities or property received; the

name and address of such customer or retail forex customer; the dates

when the securities or property were received; the identity of the

depositories or other places where such securities or property are

segregated or held; the dates of deposits and withdrawals from such

depositories; and the dates of return of such securities or property to

such customer or retail forex customer, or other disposition thereof,

together with the facts and circumstances of such other disposition. In

the event any futures commission merchant deposits with a derivatives

clearing organization, directly or with a bank or trust company acting

as custodian for such derivatives clearing organization, securities

and/or property which belong to a particular customer, such futures

commission merchant shall obtain written acknowledgment from such

derivatives clearing organization that it was informed that such

securities or property belong to customers of the futures commission

merchant making the deposit. Such acknowledgment shall be retained as

provided in Sec. 1.31.

(b) Each derivatives clearing organization which receives from

members securities or property belonging to particular customers of

such members in lieu of money to margin, purchase, guarantee, or secure

the commodity interests of such customers, or receives notice that any

such securities or property have been received by a bank or trust

company acting as custodian for such derivatives clearing organization,

shall maintain, as provided in Sec. 1.31, a record which will show

separately for each member, the dates when such securities or property

were received, the identity of the depositories or other places where

such securities or property are segregated, the dates such securities

or property were returned to the member, or otherwise disposed of,

together with the facts and circumstances of such other disposition

including the authorization therefor.

0

22. Revise Sec. 1.37 to read as follows:

Sec. 1.37 Customer's name, address, and occupation recorded; record

of guarantor or controller of account.

(a) Each futures commission merchant, retail foreign exchange

dealer, introducing broker, and member of a contract market shall keep

a record in permanent form which shall show for each commodity interest

account carried or introduced by it the true name and address of the

person for whom such account is carried or introduced and the principal

occupation or business of such person as well as the name of any other

person guaranteeing such account or exercising any trading control with

respect to such account. For each such commodity option account, the

records kept by such futures commission merchant, introducing broker,

and member of a contract market must also show the name of the person

who has solicited and is responsible for each customer's account or

assign account numbers in such a manner to identify that person.

(b) As of the close of the market each day, each futures commission

merchant which carries an account for another futures commission

merchant, foreign broker (as defined in Sec. 15.00 of this chapter),

member of a contract market, or other person, on an omnibus basis shall

maintain a daily record for each such omnibus account of the total open

long contracts and the total open short contracts in each future and in

each swap and, for commodity option transactions, the total open put

options purchased, the total open put options granted, the total open

call options purchased, and the total open call options granted for

each commodity option expiration date.

(c) Each designated contract market and swap execution facility

shall keep a record in permanent form, which shall show the true name,

address, and

[[Page 66329]]

principal occupation or business of any foreign trader executing

transactions on the facility or exchange. In addition, upon request, a

designated contract market or swap execution facility shall provide to

the Commission information regarding the name of any person

guaranteeing such transactions or exercising any control over the

trading of such foreign trader.

(d) Paragraph (c) of this section shall not apply to a designated

contract market or swap execution facility on which transactions in

futures, swaps or options (other than swaps) contracts of foreign

traders are executed through, or the resulting transactions are

maintained in, accounts carried by a registered futures commission

merchant or introduced by a registered introducing broker subject to

the provisions of paragraph (a) of this section.

0

23. Amend Sec. 1.39 by revising paragraph (a) introductory text and

paragraphs (a)(1)(ii), (a)(2), (a)(3), (a)(4), (b), and (c), to read as

follows:

Sec. 1.39 Simultaneous buying and selling orders of different

principals; execution of, for and between principals.

(a) Conditions and requirements. A member of a contract market or a

swap execution facility who shall have at the same time both buying and

selling orders of different principals for the same swap, commodity for

future delivery in the same delivery month or the same option (both

puts or both calls, with the same underlying contract for future

delivery or the same underlying commodity, expiration date and strike

price) may execute such orders for and directly between such principals

at the market price, if in conformity with written rules of such

contract market or swap execution facility which have been approved by

or self-certified to the Commission, and:

(1) * * *

(ii) When in non-pit trading in swaps or contracts of sale for

future delivery, bids and offers are posted on a board, such member:

(A) Pursuant to such buying order posts a bid on the board and,

incident to the execution of such selling order, accepts such bid and

all other bids posted at equal to or higher than the bid posted by him;

or

(B) Pursuant to such selling order posts an offer on the board and,

incident to the execution of such buying order, accepts such offer and

all other offers posted at prices equal to or lower than the offer

posted by him;

(2) Such member executes such orders in the presence of an official

representative of such contract market or swap execution facility

designated to observe such transactions and, by appropriate descriptive

words or symbol, clearly identifies all such transactions on his

trading card or other record, made at the time of execution, and notes

thereon the exact time of execution and promptly presents or makes

available said record to such official representative for verification

and initialing, as appropriate;

(3) Such swap execution facility or contract market keeps a record

in permanent form of each such transaction showing all transaction

details required to be captured by the Act, Commission rule or

regulation; and

(4) Neither the futures commission merchant, other registrant

receiving nor the member executing such orders has any interest

therein, directly or indirectly, except as a fiduciary.

(b) Large order execution procedures. (1) A member of a contract

market or a swap execution facility may execute simultaneous buying and

selling orders of different principals directly between the principals

in compliance with Commission regulations and large order execution

procedures established by written rules of the contract market or swap

execution facility that have been approved by or self-certified to the

Commission: Provided, That, to the extent such large order execution

procedures do not meet the conditions and requirements of paragraph (a)

of this section, the contract market or swap execution facility has

petitioned the Commission for, and the Commission has granted, an

exemption from the conditions and requirements of paragraph (a) of this

section. Any such petition must be accompanied by proposed contract

market or swap execution facility rules to implement the large order

execution procedures. The petition shall include:

(i) An explanation of why the proposed large order execution rules

do not comply with paragraph (a) of this section; and

(ii) A description of a special surveillance program that would be

followed by the contract market or swap execution facility in

monitoring the large order execution procedures.

(2) The Commission may, in its discretion and upon such terms and

conditions as it deems appropriate, grant such petition for exemption

if it finds that the exemption is not contrary to the public interest

and the purpose of the provision from which explanation is sought. The

petition shall be considered concurrently with the proposed large order

execution rules.

(c) Not deemed filling orders by offset. The execution of orders in

compliance with the conditions herein set forth will not be deemed to

constitute the filling of orders by offset within the meaning of

section 4b(a) of the Act.

0

24. Revise Sec. 1.40 to read as follows:

Sec. 1.40 Crop, market information letters, reports; copies required.

Each futures commission merchant, each retail foreign exchange

dealer, each introducing broker, and each member of a contract market

or a swap execution facility shall, upon request, furnish or cause to

be furnished to the Commission a true copy of any letter, circular,

telecommunication, or report published or given general circulation by

such futures commission merchant, retail foreign exchange dealer,

introducing broker, member or eligible contract participant which

concerns crop or market information or conditions that affect or tend

to affect the price of any commodity, including any exchange rate, and

the true source of or authority for the information contained therein.

Sec. 1.44 [Removed and Reserved]

0

25. Remove and reserve Sec. 1.44.

0

26. Amend Sec. 1.46 by revising paragraph (a)(1) introductory text and

paragraphs (a)(1)(iii), (a)(1)(iv), (a)(2)(iii), (a)(2)(iv), and (b),

to read as follows:

Sec. 1.46 Application and closing out of offsetting long and short

positions.

(a) Application of purchases and sales. (1) Except with respect to

purchases or sales which are for omnibus accounts, or where the

customer or account controller has instructed otherwise, any futures

commission merchant who, on or subject to the rules of a designated

contract market:

* * * * *

(iii) Purchases a put or call option for the account of any

customer when the account of such customer at the time of such purchase

has a short put or call option position with the same underlying

futures contract or same underlying commodity, strike price, expiration

date and contract market as that purchased; or

(iv) Sells a put or call option for the account of any customer

when the account of such customer at the time of such sale has a long

put or call option position with the same underlying futures contract

or same underlying commodity, strike price, expiration date and

contract market as that sold--shall on the same day apply such purchase

or sale against such previously held short or long futures or option

position, as the case may be, and shall, for futures transactions,

promptly furnish such

[[Page 66330]]

customer a statement showing the financial result of the transactions

involved and, if applicable, that the account was introduced to the

futures commission merchant by an introducing broker and the names of

the futures commission merchant and introducing broker.

(2) * * *

(iii) Purchases a put or call option involving foreign currency for

the account of any customer when the account of such customer at the

time of such purchase has a short put or call option position with the

same underlying currency, strike price, and expiration date as that

purchased; or

(iv) Sells a put or call option involving foreign currency for the

account of any customer when the account of such customer at the time

of such sale has a long put or call option position with the same

underlying currency, strike price, and expiration date as that sold--

shall immediately apply such purchase or sale against such previously

held opposite transaction, and shall promptly furnish such retail forex

customer a statement showing the financial result of the transactions

involved and, if applicable, that the account was introduced to the

futures commission merchant or retail foreign exchange dealer by an

introducing broker and the names of the futures commission merchant or

retail foreign exchange dealer, and the introducing broker.

(b) Close-out against oldest open position. In all instances

wherein the short or long futures, retail forex transaction or option

position in such customer's or retail forex customer's account

immediately prior to such offsetting purchase or sale is greater than

the quantity purchased or sold, the futures commission merchant or

retail foreign exchange dealer shall apply such offsetting purchase or

sale to the oldest portion of the previously held short or long

position: Provided, That upon specific instructions from the customer

the offsetting transaction shall be applied as specified by the

customer without regard to the date of acquisition of the previously

held position; and Provided, further, that a futures commission

merchant or retail foreign exchange dealer, if permitted by the rules

of a registered futures association, may offset, at the customer's

request, retail forex transactions of the same size, even if the

customer holds other transactions of a different size, but in each case

must offset the transaction against the oldest transaction of the same

size. Such instructions may also be accepted from any person who, by

power of attorney or otherwise, actually directs trading in the

customer's or retail forex customer's account unless the person

directing the trading is the futures commission merchant or retail

foreign exchange dealer (including any partner thereof), or is an

officer, employee, or agent of the futures commission merchant or

retail foreign exchange dealer. With respect to every such offsetting

transaction that, in accordance with such specific instructions, is not

applied to the oldest portion of the previously held position, the

futures commission merchant or retail foreign exchange dealer shall

clearly show on the statement issued to the customer or retail forex

customer in connection with the transaction, that because of the

specific instructions given by or on behalf of the customer or retail

forex customer the transaction was not applied in the usual manner,

i.e., against the oldest portion of the previously held position.

However, no such showing need be made if the futures commission

merchant or retail foreign exchange dealer has received such specific

instructions in writing from the customer or retail forex customer for

whom such account is carried.

* * * * *

0

27. Revise paragraph (b)(1)(iii) of Sec. 1.49 to read as follows:

Sec. 1.49 Denomination of customer funds and location of

depositories.

* * * * *

(b) * * *

(1) * * *

(iii) In a currency in which funds have accrued to the customer as

a result of trading conducted on a designated contract market, to the

extent of such accruals.

* * * * *

Sec. 1.53 [Removed and Reserved]

0

28. Remove and reserve Sec. 1.53.

0

29. Amend Sec. 1.57 by revising paragraph (a)(1), (a)(2) introductory

text, (a)(2)(ii), (c) introductory text, (c)(1), (c)(2), (c)(4)(i), and

(c)(4)(iv), to read as follows:

Sec. 1.57 Operations and activities of introducing brokers.

(a) * * *

(1) Open and carry each customer's account with a carrying futures

commission merchant on a fully-disclosed basis: Provided, however, That

an introducing broker which has entered into a guarantee agreement with

a futures commission merchant in accordance with the provisions of

Sec. 1.10(j) must open and carry such customer's account with such

guarantor futures commission merchant on a fully-disclosed basis; and

(2) Transmit promptly for execution all customer orders to:

* * * * *

(ii) A floor broker, if the introducing broker identifies its

carrying futures commission merchant and that carrying futures

commission merchant is also the clearing member with respect to the

customer's order.

* * * * *

(c) An introducing broker may not accept any money, securities or

property (or extend credit in lieu thereof) to margin, guarantee or

secure any trades or contracts of customers, or any money, securities

or property accruing as a result of such trades or contracts: Provided,

however, That an introducing broker may deposit a check in a qualifying

account or forward a check drawn by a customer if:

(1) The futures commission merchant carrying the customer's account

authorizes the introducing broker, in writing, to receive a check in

the name of the futures commission merchant, and the introducing broker

retains such written authorization in its files in accordance with

Sec. 1.31;

(2) The check is payable to the futures commission merchant

carrying the customer's account;

* * * * *

(4) * * *

(i) Which is maintained in an account name which clearly identifies

the funds therein as belonging to customers of the futures commission

merchant carrying the customer's account;

* * * * *

(iv) For which the bank or trust company provides the futures

commission merchant carrying the customer's account with a written

acknowledgment, which the futures commission merchant must retain in

its files in accordance with Sec. 1.31, that it was informed that the

funds deposited therein are those of customers and are being held in

accordance with the provisions of the Act and the regulations in this

chapter.

0

30. Amend Sec. 1.59 by revising paragraphs (a)(1), (a)(4)(i), (a)(5),

(a)(7), (a)(8), (a)(9) introductory text, (a)(10), (b)(1) introductory

text, (b)(1)(i)(A), (b)(1)(i)(C), and (c), to read as follows:

Sec. 1.59 Activities of self-regulatory organization employees,

governing board members, committee members and consultants.

(a) * * *

(1) Self-regulatory organization means ``self-regulatory

organization,'' as defined in Sec. 1.3(ee), and includes the

[[Page 66331]]

term ``clearing organization,'' as defined in Sec. 1.3(d).

(4) * * *

(i) Any governing board member compensated by a self-regulatory

organization solely for governing board activities; or

* * * * *

(5) Material information means information which, if such

information were publicly known, would be considered important by a

reasonable person in deciding whether to trade a particular commodity

interest on a contract market or a swap execution facility, or to clear

a swap contract through a derivatives clearing organization. As used in

this section, ``material information'' includes, but is not limited to,

information relating to present or anticipated cash positions,

commodity interests, trading strategies, the financial condition of

members of self-regulatory organizations or members of linked exchanges

or their customers, or the regulatory actions or proposed regulatory

actions of a self-regulatory organization or a linked exchange.

* * * * *

(7) Linked exchange means:

(i) Any board of trade, exchange or market outside the United

States, its territories or possessions, which has an agreement with a

contract market or swap execution facility in the United States that

permits positions in a commodity interest which have been established

on one of the two markets to be liquidated on the other market;

(ii) Any board of trade, exchange or market outside the United

States, its territories or possessions, the products of which are

listed on a United States contract market, swap execution facility, or

a trading facility thereof;

(iii) Any securities exchange, the products of which are held as

margin in a commodity account or cleared by a securities clearing

organization pursuant to a cross-margining arrangement with a futures

clearing organization; or

(iv) Any clearing organization which clears the products of any of

the foregoing markets.

(8) Commodity interest means any commodity futures, commodity

option or swap contract traded on or subject to the rules of a contract

market, a swap execution facility or linked exchange, or cleared by a

derivatives clearing organization, or cash commodities traded on or

subject to the rules of a board of trade which has been designated as a

contract market.

(9) Related commodity interest means any commodity interest which

is traded on or subject to the rules of a contract market, swap

execution facility, linked exchange, or other board of trade, exchange,

or market, or cleared by a derivatives clearing organization, other

than the self-regulatory organization by which a person is employed,

and with respect to which:

* * * * *

(10) Pooled investment vehicle means a trading vehicle organized

and operated as a commodity pool within the meaning of Sec. 4.10(d) of

this chapter, and whose units of participation have been registered

under the Securities Act of 1933, or a trading vehicle for which Sec.

4.5 of this chapter makes available relief from regulation as a

commodity pool operator, i.e., registered investment companies,

insurance company separate accounts, bank trust funds, and certain

pension plans.

(b) Employees of self-regulatory organizations; Self-regulatory

organization rules. (1) Each self-regulatory organization must maintain

in effect rules which have been submitted to the Commission pursuant to

section 5c(c) of the Act and part 40 of this chapter (or, pursuant to

section 17(j) of the Act in the case of a registered futures

association) that, at a minimum, prohibit:

(i) * * *

(A) Trading, directly or indirectly, in any commodity interest

traded on or cleared by the employing contract market, swap execution

facility, or clearing organization;

* * * * *

(C) Trading, directly or indirectly, in a commodity interest traded

on contract markets or swap execution facilities or cleared by

derivatives clearing organizations other than the employing self-

regulatory organization if the employee has access to material, non-

public information concerning such commodity interest;

* * * * *

(c) Governing board members, committee members, and consultants;

Registered futures association rules. Each registered futures

association must maintain in effect rules which have been submitted to

the Commission pursuant to section 17(j) of the Act which provide that

no governing board member, committee member, or consultant shall use or

disclose--for any purpose other than the performance of official duties

as a governing board member, committee member, or consultant--material,

non-public information obtained as a result of the performance of such

person's official duties.

* * * * *

Sec. 1.62 [Removed and Reserved]

0

31. Remove and reserve Sec. 1.62.

0

32. Amend Sec. 1.63 by revising paragraphs (a)(1), (b) introductory

text and (d) to read as follows:

Sec. 1.63 Service on self-regulatory organization governing boards or

committees by persons with disciplinary histories.

(a) * * *

(1) Self-regulatory organization means a ``self-regulatory

organization'' as defined in Sec. 1.3(ee), and includes a ``clearing

organization'' as defined in Sec. 1.3(d), except as defined in

paragraph (b)(6) of this section.

* * * * *

(b) Each self-regulatory organization must maintain in effect rules

which have been submitted to the Commission pursuant to section 5c(c)

of the Act and part 40 of this chapter or, in the case of a registered

futures association, pursuant to section 17(j) of the Act, that render

a person ineligible to serve on its disciplinary committees,

arbitration panels, oversight panels or governing board who:

* * * * *

(d) Each self-regulatory organization shall submit to the

Commission a schedule listing all those rule violations which

constitute disciplinary offenses as defined in paragraph (a)(6)(i) of

this section and to the extent necessary to reflect revisions shall

submit an amended schedule within thirty days of the end of each

calendar year. Each self-regulatory organization must maintain and keep

current the schedule required by this section, and post the schedule on

the self-regulatory organization's Web site so that it is in a public

place designed to provide notice to members and otherwise ensure its

availability to the general public.

* * * * *

0

33. Revise Sec. 1.67 to read as follows:

Sec. 1.67 Notification of final disciplinary action involving

financial harm to a customer.

(a) Definitions. For purposes of this section:

Final disciplinary action means any decision by or settlement with

a contract market or swap execution facility in a disciplinary matter

which cannot be further appealed at the contract market or swap

execution facility, is not subject to the stay of the Commission or a

court of competent jurisdiction, and has not been reversed by the

Commission or any court of competent jurisdiction.

(b) Upon any final disciplinary action in which a contract market

or swap

[[Page 66332]]

execution facility finds that a member has committed a rule violation

that involved a transaction for a customer, whether executed or not,

and that resulted in financial harm to the customer:

(1)(i) The contract market or swap execution facility shall

promptly provide written notice of the disciplinary action to the

futures commission merchant or other registrant; and

(ii) A futures commission merchant or other registrant that

receives a notice, under paragraph (b)(1)(i) of this section shall

promptly provide written notice of the disciplinary action to the

customer as disclosed on its books and records. If the customer is

another futures commission merchant or other registrant, such futures

commission merchant or other registrant shall promptly provide notice

to the customer.

(2) A written notice required by paragraph (b)(1) of this section

must include the principal facts of the disciplinary action and a

statement that the contract market or swap execution facility has found

that the member has committed a rule violation that involved a

transaction for the customer, whether executed or not, and that

resulted in financial harm to the customer. For the purposes of this

paragraph, a notice which includes the information listed in Sec.

9.11(b) of this chapter shall be deemed to include the principal facts

of the disciplinary action thereof.

Sec. 1.68 [Removed and Reserved]

0

34. Remove and reserve Sec. 1.68.

0

35. Amend Appendix B to part 1 by revising paragraph (b) to read as

follows:

Appendix B--Fees for Contract Market Rule Enforcement Reviews and

Financial Reviews

* * * * *

(b) The Commission determines fees charged to exchanges based

upon a formula that considers both actual costs and trading volume.

* * * * *

Appendix C to Part 1--[Removed and Reserved]

0

36. Remove and reserve Appendix C to Part 1.

PART 4--COMMODITY POOL OPERATORS AND COMMODITY TRADING ADVISORS

0

37. The authority citation for part 4 continues to read as follows:

Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1a, 2, 4, 6(c), 6b, 6c, 6l, 6m, 6n, 6o, 12a

and 23, as amended by the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer

Protection Act, Pub. L. 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376 (2010).

Sec. 4.23 [Amended]

0

38. Amend Sec. 4.23 by removing the term ``physical'' in paragraphs

(a)(1) and (b)(1) and adding in its place the term ``commodity''.

Sec. 4.33 [Amended]

0

39. Amend Sec. 4.33 by removing the word ``physical'' in paragraph

(b)(1) and adding in its place the word ``commodity''.

PART 5--OFF-EXCHANGE FOREIGN CURRENCY TRANSACTIONS

0

40. The authority citation for part 5 continues to read as follows:

Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1a, 2, 6, 6a, 6b, 6c, 6d, 6e, 6f, 6g, 6h,

6i, 6k, 6m, 6n, 6o, 8, 9, 9a, 12, 12a, 13b, 13c, 16a, 18, 19, 21,

and 23, as amended by Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform

and Consumer Protection Act, Pub. L. 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376 (Jul.

21, 2010).

0

41. Revise paragraphs (k) and (m) of Sec. 5.1 to read as follows:

Sec. 5.1 Definitions.

* * * * *

(k) Retail forex customer means a person, other than an eligible

contract participant as defined in section 1a(18) of the Act, acting on

its own behalf and trading in any account, agreement, contract or

transaction described in section 2(c)(2)(B) or 2(c)(2)(C) of the Act.

* * * * *

(m) Retail forex transaction means any account, agreement, contract

or transaction described in section 2(c)(2)(B) or 2(c)(2)(C) of the

Act. A retail forex transaction does not include an account, agreement,

contract or transaction in foreign currency that is a contract of sale

of a commodity for future delivery (or an option thereon) that is

executed, traded on or otherwise subject to the rules of a contract

market designated pursuant to section 5(a) of the Act.

0

42. Revise Part 7 to read as follows:

PART 7--REGISTERED ENTITY RULES ALTERED OR SUPPLEMENTED BY THE

COMMISSION

Authority: 7 U.S.C. 7a-2(c) and 12a(7), as amended by Title VII

of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act,

Pub. L. 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376 (2010).

Subpart A--General Provisions

Sec. 7.1 Scope of rules.

This part sets forth registered entity rules altered or

supplemented by the Commission pursuant to section 8a(7) of the Act.

Subpart B--[Reserved]

Subpart C--[Reserved]

PART 8--[REMOVED AND RESERVED]

0

43. Remove and reserve part 8.

PART 15--REPORTS--GENERAL PROVISIONS

0

44. The authority citation for part 15 continues to read as follows:

Authority: 7 U.S.C. 2, 5, 6a, 6c, 6f, 6g, 6i, 6k, 6m, 6n, 7,

7a, 9, 12a, 19, and 21, as amended by Title VII of the Dodd-Frank

Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, Pub. L. 111-203, 124

Stat. 1376 (2010).

0

45. Revise paragraph (p)(1)(ii) of Sec. 15.00 to read as follows:

Sec. 15.00 Definitions of terms used in parts 15 to 19, and 21 of

this chapter.

* * * * *

(p) * * *

(1) * * *

(ii) Long or short put or call options that exercise into the same

future of any commodity, or other long or short put or call commodity

options that have identical expirations and exercise into the same

commodity, on any one reporting market.

* * * * *

0

46. Revise paragraphs (a), (e), (f), (g) and (h) of Sec. 15.05 to read

as follows:

Sec. 15.05 Designation of agent for foreign persons.

(a) For purposes of this section, the term ``futures contract''

means any contract for the purchase or sale of any commodity for future

delivery, or a contract identified under Sec. 36.3(c)(1)(i) traded on

an electronic trading facility operating in reliance on the exemption

set forth in Sec. 36.3 of this chapter, traded or executed on or

subject to the rules of any designated contract market, or for the

purposes of paragraph (i) of this section, a reporting market

(including all agreements, contracts and transactions that are treated

by a clearing organization as fungible with such contracts); the term

``option contract'' means any contract for the purchase or sale of a

commodity option, or as applicable, any other instrument subject to the

Act, traded or executed on or subject to the rules of any designated

contract market, or for the purposes of paragraph (i) of this section,

a reporting market (including all agreements, contracts and

transactions that are treated by a clearing organization as fungible

with such contracts); the term

[[Page 66333]]

``customer'' means any person for whose benefit a foreign broker makes

or causes to be made any futures contract or option contract; and the

term ``communication'' means any summons, complaint, order, subpoena,

special call, request for information, or notice, as well as any other

written document or correspondence.

* * * * *

(e) Any designated contract market that permits a foreign broker to

intermediate contracts, agreements or transactions, or permits a

foreign trader to effect contracts, agreements or transactions on the

facility or exchange, shall be deemed to be the agent of the foreign

broker and any of its customers for whom the transactions were

executed, or the foreign trader, for purposes of accepting delivery and

service of any communication issued by or on behalf of the Commission

to the foreign broker, any of its customers or the foreign trader with

respect to any contracts, agreements or transactions executed by the

foreign broker or the foreign trader on the designated contract market.

Service or delivery of any communication issued by or on behalf of the

Commission to a designated contract market shall constitute valid and

effective service upon the foreign broker, any of its customers, or the

foreign trader. A designated contract market which has been served

with, or to which there has been delivered, a communication issued by

or on behalf of the Commission to a foreign broker, any of its

customers, or a foreign trader shall transmit the communication

promptly and in a manner which is reasonable under the circumstances,

or in a manner specified by the Commission in the communication, to the

foreign broker, any of its customers or the foreign trader.

(f) It shall be unlawful for any designated contract market to

permit a foreign broker, any of its customers or a foreign trader to

effect contracts, agreements or transactions on the facility unless the

designated contract market prior thereto informs the foreign broker,

any of its customers or the foreign trader, in any reasonable manner

the facility deems to be appropriate, of the requirements of this

section.

(g) The requirements of paragraphs (e) and (f) of this section

shall not apply to any contracts, transactions or agreements traded on

any designated contract market if the foreign broker, any of its

customers or the foreign trader has duly executed and maintains in

effect a written agency agreement in compliance with this paragraph

with a person domiciled in the United States and has provided a copy of

the agreement to the designated contract market prior to effecting any

contract, agreement or transaction on the facility. This agreement must

authorize the person domiciled in the United States to serve as the

agent of the foreign broker, any of its customers or the foreign trader

for purposes of accepting delivery and service of all communications

issued by or on behalf of the Commission to the foreign broker, any of

its customers or the foreign trader and must provide an address in the

United States where the agent will accept delivery and service of

communications from the Commission. This agreement must be filed with

the Commission by the designated contract market prior to permitting

the foreign broker, any of its customers or the foreign trader to

effect any transactions in futures or option contracts. Unless

otherwise specified by the Commission, the agreements required to be

filed with the Commission shall be filed with the Secretary of the

Commission at Three Lafayette Centre, 1155 21st Street NW., Washington,

DC 20581. A foreign broker, any of its customers or a foreign trader

shall notify the Commission immediately if the written agency agreement

is terminated, revoked, or is otherwise no longer in effect. If the

designated contract market knows or should know that the agreement has

expired, been terminated, or is no longer in effect, the designated

contract market shall notify the Secretary of the Commission

immediately. If the written agency agreement expires, terminates, or is

not in effect, the designated contract market and the foreign broker,

any of its customers or the foreign trader are subject to the

provisions of paragraphs (e) and (f) of this section.

(h) The provisions of paragraphs (e), (f) and (g) of this section

shall not apply to a designated contract market on which all

transactions of foreign brokers, their customers or foreign traders in

futures or option contracts are executed through, or the resulting

transactions are maintained in, accounts carried by a registered

futures commission merchant or introduced by a registered introducing

broker subject to the provisions of paragraphs (a), (b), (c) and (d) of

this section.

* * * * *

PART 16--REPORTS BY REPORTING MARKETS

0

47. The authority citation for part 16 continues to read as follows:

Authority: 7 U.S.C. 2, 6a, 6c, 6g, 6i, 7, 7a and 12a, as

amended by Title XIII of the Food, Conservation and Energy Act of

2008, Pub. L. 110-246, 122 Stat. 1624 (June 18, 2008), unless

otherwise noted.

0

48. Revise paragraph (a) introductory text of Sec. 16.00 to read as

follows:

Sec. 16.00 Clearing member reports.

(a) Information to be provided. Each reporting market shall submit

to the Commission, in accordance with paragraph (b) of this section, a

report for each business day, showing for each clearing member, by

proprietary and customer account, the following information separately

for futures by commodity and by future, and, for options, by underlying

futures contract (for options on futures contracts) or by underlying

commodity (for other commodity options), and by put, by call, by

expiration date and by strike price:

* * * * *

0

49. Amend Sec. 16.01 by revising the section heading and paragraphs

(a)(1)(ii), (a)(1)(iv), (b)(1)(ii), and (b)(1)(iv) to read as follows:

Sec. 16.01 Publication of market data on futures, swaps and options

thereon: trading volume, open contracts, prices, and critical dates.

(a) * * *

(1) * * *

(ii) For options, by underlying futures contracts for options on

futures contracts or by underlying commodity for options on

commodities, and by put, by call, by expiration date and by strike

price;

* * * * *

(iv) For options on swaps or classes of options on swaps, by

underlying swap contracts for options on swap contracts or by

underlying commodity for options on swaps on commodities, and by put,

by call, by expiration date and by strike price.

* * * * *

(b) * * *

(1) * * *

(ii) For options, by underlying futures contracts for options on

futures contracts or by underlying commodity for options on

commodities, and by put, by call, by expiration date and by strike

price;

* * * * *

(iv) For options on swaps or classes of options on swaps, by

underlying swap contracts for options on swap contracts or by

underlying commodity for options on swaps on commodities, and by put,

by call, by expiration date and by strike price.

* * * * *

PART 18--REPORTS BY TRADERS

0

50. The authority citation for part 18 continues to read as follows:

[[Page 66334]]

Authority: 7 U.S.C. 2, 4, 5, 6a, 6c, 6f, 6g, 6i, 6k, 6m, 6n,

12a and 19, as amended by Title XIII of the Food, Conservation and

Energy Act of 2008, Pub. L. 110-246, 122 Stat. 1624 (June 18, 2008);

5 U.S.C. 552 and 552(b), unless otherwise noted.

0

51. Revise paragraphs (a)(2), (a)(3), and (a)(4) of Sec. 18.05 to read

as follows:

Sec. 18.05 Maintenance of books and records.

(a) * * *

(2) Executed over the counter or pursuant to part 35 of this

chapter;

(3) On exempt commercial markets operating under a Commission

grandfather relief order issued pursuant to Section 723(c)(2)(B) of the

Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Pub. L. 111-

203, 124 Stat. 1376 (2010));

(4) On exempt boards of trade operating under a Commission

grandfather relief order issued pursuant to Section 734(c)(2) of the

Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Pub. L. 111-

203, 124 Stat. 1376 (2010)); and

* * * * *

PART 21--SPECIAL CALLS

0

52. The authority citation for part 21 continues to read as follows:

Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1a, 2, 2a, 4, 6a, 6c, 6f, 6g, 6i, 6k, 6m,

6n, 7, 7a, 12a, 19 and 21, as amended by Pub. L. 111-203, 124 Stat.

1376; 5 U.S.C. 552 and 552(b), unless otherwise noted.

0

53. Revise paragraph (b) of Sec. 21.03 to read as follows:

Sec. 21.03 Selected special calls--duties of foreign brokers,

domestic and foreign traders, futures commission merchants, clearing

members, introducing brokers, and reporting markets.

* * * * *

(b) It shall be unlawful for a futures commission merchant to open

a futures or options account or to effect transactions in futures or

options contracts for an existing account, or for an introducing broker

to introduce such an account, for any customer for whom the futures

commission merchant or introducing broker is required to provide the

explanation provided for in Sec. 15.05(c) of this chapter, or for a

reporting market that is a registered entity under section 1a(40)(F) of

the Act, to cause to open an account, or to cause transactions to be

effected, in a contract traded in reliance on a Commission grandfather

relief order issued pursuant to Section 723(c)(2)(B) of the Dodd-Frank

Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Pub. L. 111-203, 124

Stat. 1376 (2010)), for an existing account for any person that is a

foreign clearing member or foreign trader, until the futures commission

merchant, introducing broker, clearing member or reporting market has

explained fully to the customer, in any manner that such person deems

appropriate, the provisions of this section.

* * * * *

PART 22--CLEARED SWAPS

0

54. The authority citation for part 22 continues to read as follows:

Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1a, 6d, 7a-1 as amended by Pub. L. 111-203,

124 Stat. 1376.

Sec. 22.1 [Amended]

0

55. Amend Sec. 22.1 by removing the definition of ``Customer.''

0

56. Amend Sec. 22.2 by revising paragraphs (c)(2)(ii) and (e)(1) to

read as follows:

Sec. 22.2 Futures Commission Merchants: Treatment of Cleared Swaps

and Associated Cleared Swaps Customer Collateral.

* * * * *

(c) * * *

(2) * * *

(ii) Other categories of funds belonging to Futures Customers (as

Sec. 1.3 of this chapter defines that term), or Foreign Futures or

Foreign Options Customers (as Sec. 30.1 of this chapter defines that

term) of the futures commission merchant, including Futures Customer

Funds (as Sec. 1.3 of this chapter defines such term) or the foreign

futures or foreign options secured amount (as Sec. 1.3 of this chapter

defines such term), except as expressly permitted by Commission rule,

regulation, or order, or by a derivatives clearing organization rule

approved in accordance with Sec. 39.15(b)(2) of this chapter.

* * * * *

(e) * * *

(1) Permitted investments. A futures commission merchant may invest

money, securities, or other property constituting Cleared Swaps

Customer Collateral in accordance with Sec. 1.25 of this chapter.

* * * * *

0

57. Amend Sec. 22.3 by revising paragraphs (c)(2)(iii) and (d) to read

as follows:

Sec. 22.3 Derivatives clearing organizations: Treatment of cleared

swaps customer collateral.

* * * * *

(c) * * *

(2) * * *

(iii) Futures Customer Funds (as Sec. 1.3 of this chapter defines

such term) or the foreign futures or foreign options secured amount (as

Sec. 1.3 of this chapter defines such term), except as expressly

permitted by Commission rule, regulation, or order, (or by a

derivatives clearing organization rule approved in accordance with

Sec. 39.15(b)(2) of this chapter).

(d) Exceptions; Permitted Investments. Notwithstanding the

foregoing and Sec. 22.15, a derivatives clearing organization may

invest the money, securities, or other property constituting Cleared

Swaps Customer Collateral in accordance with Sec. 1.25 of this

chapter.

0

58. Amend Sec. 22.5 by revising paragraphs (a) and (b) to read as

follows:

Sec. 22.5 Futures commission merchants and derivatives clearing

organizations: Written acknowledgement.

(a) Before depositing Cleared Swaps Customer Collateral, the

futures commission merchant or derivatives clearing organization shall

obtain and retain in its files a separate written acknowledgement

letter from each depository in accordance with Sec. Sec. 1.20 and 1.26

of this chapter, with all references to ``Futures Customer Funds''

modified to apply to Cleared Swaps Customer Collateral, and with all

references to section 4d(a) or 4d(b) of the Act and the regulations

thereunder modified to apply to section 4d(f) of the Act and the

regulations thereunder.

(b) The futures commission merchant or derivatives clearing

organization shall adhere to all requirements specified in Sec. Sec.

1.20 and 1.26 of this chapter regarding retaining, permitting access

to, filing, or amending the written acknowledgement letter, in all

cases as if the Cleared Swaps Customer Collateral comprised Futures

Customer Funds subject to segregation pursuant to section 4d(a) or

4d(b) of the Act and the regulations thereunder.

* * * * *

0

59. Amend Sec. 22.9 by revising paragraphs (a) and (b) to read as

follows:

Sec. 22.9 Denomination of Cleared Swaps Customer Collateral and

location of depositories.

(a) Subject to paragraph (b) of this section, futures commission

merchants and derivatives clearing organizations may hold Cleared Swaps

Customer Collateral in the denominations, at the locations and

depositories, and subject to the segregation requirements specified in

Sec. 1.49 of this chapter.

(b) Notwithstanding the requirements in Sec. 1.49 of this chapter,

a futures commission merchant's obligations to a Cleared Swaps Customer

may be denominated in a currency in which funds have accrued to the

Cleared

[[Page 66335]]

Swaps Customer as a result of a Cleared Swap carried through such

futures commission merchant, to the extent of such accruals.

* * * * *

0

60. Revise Sec. 22.10 to read as follows:

Sec. 22.10 Application of other regulatory provisions.

Sections 1.27, 1.28, 1.29, and 1.30 of this chapter shall apply to

the Cleared Swaps Customer Collateral in accordance with the terms

therein.

0

61. Amend Sec. 22.11 by revising the section heading and paragraphs

(a)(1), (a)(2), (b)(2), (c)(1), (c)(2), and (d)(2), to read as follows:

Sec. 22.11 Information to be provided regarding Cleared Swaps

Customers and their Cleared Swaps.

(a) * * *

(1) The first time that the Depositing Futures Commission Merchant

intermediates a Cleared Swap for a Cleared Swaps Customer with a

Collecting Futures Commission Merchant, provide information sufficient

to identify such Cleared Swaps Customer to the relevant Collection

Futures Commission Merchant; and

(2) At least once each business day thereafter, provide information

to the relevant Collecting Futures Commission Merchant sufficient to

identify, for each Cleared Swaps Customer, the portfolio of rights and

obligations arising from the Cleared Swaps that the Depositing Futures

Commission Merchant intermediates for such Cleared Swaps Customer.

(b) * * *

(2) The information that such entity must provide to its Collecting

Futures Commission Merchant pursuant to paragraph (a)(2) of this

section shall also include information sufficient to identify, for each

Cleared Swaps Customer referenced in paragraph (b)(1) of this section,

the portfolio of rights and obligations arising from the Cleared Swaps

that such entity intermediates as a Collecting Futures Commission

Merchant, on behalf of its Depositing Futures Commission Merchant, for

such Cleared Swaps Customer.

(c) * * *

(1) The first time that such futures commission merchant

intermediates a Cleared Swap for a Cleared Swaps Customer, provide

information to the relevant derivatives clearing organization

sufficient to identify such Cleared Swaps Customer; and

(2) At least once each business day thereafter, provide information

to the relevant derivatives clearing organization sufficient to

identify, for each Cleared Swaps Customer, the portfolio of rights and

obligations arising from the Cleared Swaps that such futures commission

merchant intermediates for such Cleared Swaps Customer.

(d) * * *

(2) The information that it must provide to the derivatives

clearing organization pursuant to paragraph (c)(2) of this section

shall also include information sufficient to identify, for each Cleared

Swaps Customer referenced in paragraph (d)(1) of this section, the

portfolio of rights and obligations arising from the Cleared Swaps that

the Collecting Futures Commission Merchant intermediates, on behalf of

the Depositing Futures Commission Merchant, for such Cleared Swaps

Customer.

* * * * *

0

62. Amend Sec. 22.12 by revising paragraph (a) introductory text and

paragraph (c) introductory text to read as follows:

Sec. 22.12 Information to be maintained regarding Cleared Swaps

Customer Collateral.

(a) Each Collecting Futures Commission Merchant receiving Cleared

Swaps Customer Collateral from an entity serving as a Depositing

Futures Commission Merchant shall, no less frequently than once each

business day, calculate and record:

* * * * *

(c) Each derivatives clearing organization receiving Cleared Swaps

Customer Collateral from a futures commission merchant shall, no less

frequently than once each business day, calculate and record:

* * * * *

0

63. Amend Sec. 22.13 by revising paragraph (a) to read as follows:

Sec. 22.13 Additions to Cleared Swaps Customer Collateral.

(a)(1) At the election of the derivatives clearing organization or

Collecting Futures Commission Merchant, the collateral requirement

referred to in Sec. 22.12(a), (c), and (d) applicable to a particular

Cleared Swaps Customer or group of Cleared Swaps Customers may be

increased based on an evaluation of the credit risk posed by such

Cleared Swaps Customer or group, in which case the derivatives clearing

organization or Collecting Futures Commission Merchant shall collect

and record such higher amount as provided in Sec. 22.12.

(2) Nothing in paragraph (a)(1) of this section is intended to

interfere with the right of a futures commission merchant to increase

the collateral requirements at such futures commission merchant with

respect to any of its Cleared Swaps Customers, Futures Customers (as

Sec. 1.3 of this chapter defines that term), or Foreign Futures or

Foreign Options Customers (as Sec. 30.1 of this chapter defines that

term).

* * * * *

0

64. Amend Sec. 22.14 by revising the section heading and paragraphs

(a)(2) and (c)(2) to read as follows:

Sec. 22.14 Futures Commission Merchant failure to meet a Cleared

Swaps Customer Margin Call in full.

(a) * * *

(2) Advise the Collecting Futures Commission Merchant of the

identity of each such Cleared Swaps Customer, and the amount

transmitted on behalf of each such Cleared Swaps Customer.

* * * * *

(c) * * *

(2) Advise the derivatives clearing organization of the identity of

each such Cleared Swaps Customer, and the amount transmitted on behalf

of each such Cleared Swaps Customer.

* * * * *

0

65. Section 22.15 is revised to read as follows:

Sec. 22.15 Treatment of Cleared Swaps Customer Collateral on an

individual basis.

Subject to Sec. 22.3(d), each derivatives clearing organization

and each Collecting Futures Commission Merchant receiving Cleared Swaps

Customer Collateral from a futures commission merchant shall treat the

value of collateral required with respect to the portfolio of rights

and obligations arising out of the Cleared Swaps intermediated for each

Cleared Swaps Customer, and collected from the futures commission

merchant, as belonging to such Cleared Swaps Customer, and such amount

shall not be used to margin, guarantee, or secure the Cleared Swaps or

other obligations of the futures commission merchant, or of any other

Cleared Swaps Customer, Futures Customer (as Sec. 1.3 of this chapter

defines that term), or Foreign Futures or Foreign Options Customer (as

Sec. 30.1 of this chapter defines that term). Nothing contained herein

shall be construed to limit, in any way, the right of a derivatives

clearing organization or Collecting Futures Commission Merchant to

liquidate any or all positions in a Cleared Swaps Customer Account in

the event of a default of a clearing member or Depositing Futures

Commission Merchant.

0

66. Amend Sec. 22.16 by revising the section heading to read as

follows:

[[Page 66336]]

Sec. 22.16 Disclosures to Cleared Swaps Customers.

* * * * *

PART 36--EXEMPT MARKETS

0

67. The authority citation for part 36 continues to read as follows:

Authority: 7 U.S.C. 2, 2(h)(7), 6, 6c and 12a, as amended by

Title XIII of the Food, Conservation and Energy Act of 2008, Pub. L.

110-246, 122 Stat. 1624 (June 18, 2008).

0

68. Section 36.1 is revised to read as follows:

Sec. 36.1 Scope.

The provisions of this part apply to any board of trade or

electronic trading facility that operates as:

(a) An exempt commercial market operating under:

(1) Until July 16, 2012, a grandfather relief order issued by the

Commission pursuant to Section 723(c)(2)(B) of the Dodd-Frank Wall

Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Pub. L. 111-203, 124 Stat.

1376 (2010)), or

(2) Any other applicable relief granted by the Commission; or

(b) An exempt board of trade operating under:

(1) Until July 16, 2012, a grandfather relief order issued by the

Commission pursuant to Section 734(c)(2) of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street

Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Pub. L. 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376

(2010)), or

(2) Any other applicable relief granted by the Commission.

0

69. Amend Sec. 36.2 by:

0

a. Revising paragraph (a) introductory text and (a)(2)(i);

0

b. Adding paragraph (a)(3); and

0

c. Revising paragraph (b) introductory text, (c)(1), (c)(2)(i)

introductory text, (c)(2)(ii) introductory text, (c)(2)(iii),

(c)(2)(iv)(A) introductory text, and (c)(3), to read as follows:

Sec. 36.2 Exempt boards of trade.

(a) Eligible commodities. Commodities eligible to be traded by an

exempt board of trade are:

* * * * *

(2) * * *

(i) The commodities defined in section 1a(19) of the Act as

``excluded commodities'' (other than a security, including any group or

index thereof or any interest in, or based on the value of, any

security or group or index of securities); and

* * * * *

(3) Such contracts must be entered into only between persons that

are eligible contract participants, as defined in section 1a(18) of the

Act and as further defined by the Commission, at the time at which the

persons entered into the contract.

(b) Notification. Boards of trade operating as exempt boards of

trade shall maintain on file with the Secretary of the Commission at

the Commission's Washington, DC headquarters, in electronic form, a

``Notification of Operation as an Exempt Board of Trade,'' and it shall

include:

* * * * *

(c) Additional requirements--(1) Prohibited representation. A board

of trade that meets the criteria set forth in this section and operates

as an exempt board of trade shall not represent to any person that it

is registered with, designated, recognized, licensed or approved by the

Commission.

(2) Market data dissemination. (i) Criteria for price discovery

determination. An exempt board of trade performs a significant price

discovery function for transactions in the cash market for a commodity

underlying any agreement, contract, or transaction executed or traded

on the facility when:

* * * * *

(ii) Notification. An exempt board of trade operating a market in

reliance on the criteria set forth in this section shall notify the

Commission when:

* * * * *

(iii) Price discovery determination. Following receipt of notice

under paragraph (c)(2)(ii) of this section, or on its own initiative,

the Commission may notify an exempt board of trade that the facility

appears to meet the criteria for performing a significant price

discovery function under paragraph (c)(2)(i)(A) or (B) of this section.

Before making a final price discovery determination under this

paragraph, the Commission shall provide the exempt board of trade with

an opportunity for a hearing through the submission of written data,

views and arguments. Any such written data, views and arguments shall

be filed with the Secretary of the Commission in the form and manner

and within the time specified by the Commission. After consideration of

all relevant matters, the Commission shall issue an order containing

its determination whether the facility performs a significant price

discovery function under the criteria of paragraph (c)(2)(i)(A) or (B)

of this section.

(iv) Price dissemination. (A) An exempt board of trade that the

Commission has determined performs a significant price discovery

function under paragraph (c)(2)(iii) of this section shall disseminate

publicly, and on a daily basis, all of the following information with

respect to transactions executed in reliance on the criteria set forth

in this section:

* * * * *

(3) Annual certification. A board of trade operating as an exempt

board of trade shall file with the Commission annually, no later than

the end of each calendar year, a notice that includes:

(i) A statement that it continues to operate under the exemption;

and

(ii) A certification that the information contained in the previous

Notification of Operation as an Exempt Board of Trade is still correct.

0

70. Section 36.3 is revised to read as follows:

Sec. 36.3 Exempt commercial markets.

(a) Eligible transactions. Agreements, contracts or transactions in

an exempt commodity eligible to be entered into on an exempt commercial

market must be:

(1) Entered into on a principal-to-principal basis solely between

persons that are eligible commercial entities, as that term is defined

in section 1a(17) of the Act, at the time the persons enter into the

agreement, contract or transaction; and

(2) Executed or traded on an electronic trading facility.

(b) Notification. An electronic trading facility relying upon the

exemption set forth in this section shall maintain on file with the

Secretary of the Commission at the Commission's Washington, DC

headquarters, in electronic form, a ``Notification of Operation as an

Exempt Commercial Market,'' and it shall include the information and

certifications specified in this section.

(c) Required information--(1) All electronic trading facilities. A

facility operating in reliance on the exemption set forth in this

section on an on-going basis, must:

(i) Provide the Commission with the terms and conditions, as

defined in Sec. 40.1(i) of this chapter and product descriptions for

each agreement, contract or transaction listed by the facility in

reliance on the exemption set forth in this section, as well as trading

conventions, mechanisms and practices;

(ii) Provide the Commission with information explaining how the

facility meets the definition of ``trading facility'' contained in

section 1a(51) of the Act and provide the Commission with access to the

electronic trading facility's trading protocols, in a format specified

by the Commission;

(iii) Demonstrate to the Commission that the facility requires, and

will require, with respect to all current and future agreements,

contracts and transactions, that each participant

[[Page 66337]]

agrees to comply with all applicable laws; that the authorized

participants are ``eligible commercial entities'' as defined in section

1a(17) of the Act; that all agreements, contracts and transactions are

and will be entered into solely on a principal-to-principal basis; and

that the facility has in place a program to routinely monitor

participants' compliance with these requirements;

(iv) At the request of the Commission, provide any other

information that the Commission, in its discretion, deems relevant to

its determination whether an agreement, contract, or transaction

performs a significant price discovery function; and

(v) File with the Commission annually, no later than the end of

each calendar year, a completed copy of CFTC Form 205--Exempt

Commercial Market Annual Certification. The information submitted in

Form 205 shall include:

(A) A statement indicating whether the electronic trading facility

continues to operate under the exemption; and

(B) A certification that affirms the accuracy of and/or updates the

information contained in the previous Notification of Operation as an

Exempt Commercial Market.

(2) Electronic trading facilities trading or executing agreements,

contracts or transactions other than significant price discovery

contracts. In addition to the requirements of paragraph (c)(1) of this

section, a facility operating in reliance on the exemption set forth in

this section, with respect to agreements, contracts or transactions

that have not been determined to perform significant price discovery

function, on an on-going basis must:

(i) Identify to the Commission those agreements, contracts and

transactions conducted on the electronic trading facility with respect

to which it intends, in good faith, to rely on the exemption set forth

in this section, and which averaged five trades per day or more over

the most recent calendar quarter; and, with respect to such agreements,

contracts and transactions, either:

(A) Submit to the Commission, in a form and manner acceptable to

the Commission, a report for each business day. Each such report shall

be electronically transmitted weekly, within such time period as is

acceptable to the Commission after the end of the week to which the

data applies, and shall show for each agreement, contract or

transaction executed the following information:

(1) The underlying commodity, the delivery or price-basing location

specified in the agreement, contract or transaction maturity date,

whether it is a financially settled or physically delivered instrument,

and the date of execution, time of execution, price, and quantity;

(2) Total daily volume and, if cleared, open interest;

(3) For an option instrument, in addition to the foregoing

information, the type of option (i.e., call or put) and strike prices;

and

(4) Such other information as the Commission may determine; or

(B) Provide to the Commission, in a form and manner acceptable to

the Commission, electronic access to those transactions conducted on

the electronic trading facility in reliance on the exemption set forth

in this section, and meeting the average five trades per day or more

threshold test of this section, which would allow the Commission to

compile the information set forth in paragraph (c)(2)(i)(A) of this

section and create a permanent record thereof.

(ii) Maintain a record of allegations or complaints received by the

electronic trading facility concerning instances of suspected fraud or

manipulation in trading activity conducted in reliance on the exemption

set forth in this section. The record shall contain the name of the

complainant, if provided, date of the complaint, market instrument,

substance of the allegations, and name of the person at the electronic

trading facility who received the complaint;

(iii) Provide to the Commission, in the form and manner prescribed

by the Commission, a copy of the record of each complaint received

pursuant to paragraph (c)(2)(ii) of this section that alleges, or

relates to, facts that would constitute a violation of the Act or

Commission regulations. Such copy shall be provided to the Commission

no later than 30 calendar days after the complaint is received;

Provided, however, that in the case of a complaint alleging, or

relating to, facts that would constitute an ongoing fraud or market

manipulation under the Act or Commission rules, such copy shall be

provided to the Commission within three business days after the

complaint is received; and

(iv) Provide to the Commission on a quarterly basis, within 15

calendar days of the close of each quarter, a list of each agreement,

contract or transaction executed on the electronic trading facility in

reliance on the exemption set forth in this section and indicate for

each such agreement, contract or transaction the contract terms and

conditions, the contract's average daily trading volume, and the most

recent open interest figures.

(3) Electronic trading facilities trading or executing significant

price discovery contracts. In addition to the requirements of paragraph

(c)(1) of this section, if the Commission determines that a facility

operating in reliance on the exemption set forth in this section trades

or executes an agreement, contract or transaction that performs a

significant price discovery function, the facility must, with respect

to any significant price discovery contract, publish and provide to the

Commission the information required by Sec. 16.01 of this chapter.

(4) Delegation of authority. The Commission hereby delegates, until

the Commission orders otherwise, the authority to determine the form

and manner of submitting the required information under paragraphs

(c)(1) through (3) of this section, to the Director of the Division of

Market Oversight and such members of the Commission's staff as the

Director may designate. The Director may submit to the Commission for

its consideration any matter that has been delegated by this paragraph.

Nothing in this paragraph prohibits the Commission, at its election,

from exercising the authority delegated in this paragraph (c)(4).

(5) Special calls. (i) All information required upon special call

of the Commission shall be transmitted at the same time and to the

office of the Commission as may be specified in the call.

(ii) Such information shall include information related to the

facility's business as an exempt electronic trading facility in

reliance on the exemption set forth in this section, including

information relating to data entry and transaction details in respect

of transactions entered into in reliance on the exemption, as the

Commission may determine appropriate--

(A) To enforce the antifraud and anti-manipulation provisions in

the Act and Commission regulations, and

(B) To evaluate a systemic market event; or

(C) To obtain information requested by a Federal financial

regulatory authority in order to enable the regulator to fulfill its

regulatory or supervisory responsibilities.

(iii) The Commission hereby delegates, until the Commission orders

otherwise, the authority to make special calls to the Directors of the

Division of Market Oversight, the Division of Clearing and Risk, the

Division of Swap Dealer and Intermediary Oversight, and the Division of

Enforcement to be exercised by each such Director or by such other

employee or employees as

[[Page 66338]]

the Director may designate. The Directors may submit to the Commission

for its consideration any matter that has been delegated in this

paragraph. Nothing in this paragraph prohibits the Commission, at its

election, from exercising the authority delegated in this paragraph

(c)(5).

(6) Subpoenas to foreign persons. A foreign person whose access to

an electronic trading facility is limited or denied at the direction of

the Commission based on the Commission's belief that the foreign person

has failed timely to comply with a subpoena shall have an opportunity

for a prompt hearing under the procedures provided in Sec. 21.03(b)

and (h) of this chapter.

(7) Prohibited representation. An electronic trading facility

relying upon the exemption set forth in this section, with respect to

agreements, contracts or transactions that are not significant price

discovery contracts, shall not represent to any person that it is

registered with, designated, recognized, licensed or approved by the

Commission.

(d) Significant price discovery contracts--(1) Criteria for

significant price discovery determination. The Commission may

determine, in its discretion, that an electronic trading facility

operating a market in reliance on the exemption set forth in this

section performs a significant price discovery function for

transactions in the cash market for a commodity underlying any

agreement, contract or transaction executed or traded on the facility.

In making such a determination, the Commission shall consider, as

appropriate:

(i) Price linkage. The extent to which the agreement, contract or

transaction uses or otherwise relies on a daily or final settlement

price, or other major price parameter, of a contract or contracts

listed for trading on or subject to the rules of a designated contract

market, or a significant price discovery contract traded on an

electronic trading facility, to value a position, transfer or convert a

position, cash or financially settle a position, or close out a

position;

(ii) Arbitrage. The extent to which the price for the agreement,

contract or transaction is sufficiently related to the price of a

contract or contracts listed for trading on or subject to the rules of

a designated contract market, or a significant price discovery contract

or contracts trading on or subject to the rules of an electronic

trading facility, so as to permit market participants to effectively

arbitrage between the markets by simultaneously maintaining positions

or executing trades in the contracts on a frequent and recurring basis;

(iii) Material price reference. The extent to which, on a frequent

and recurring basis, bids, offers, or transactions in a commodity are

directly based on, or are determined by referencing, the prices

generated by agreements, contracts or transactions being traded or

executed on the electronic trading facility;

(iv) Material liquidity. The extent to which the volume of

agreements, contracts or transactions in the commodity being traded on

the electronic trading facility is sufficient to have a material effect

on other agreements, contracts or transactions listed for trading on or

subject to the rules of a designated contract market or an electronic

trading facility operating in reliance on the exemption set forth in

this section;

(v) Other material factors. [Reserved]

(2) Notification of possible significant price discovery contract

conditions. An electronic trading facility operating in reliance on the

exemption set forth in this section shall promptly notify the

Commission, and such notification shall be accompanied by supporting

information or data concerning any contract that:

(i) Averaged five trades per day or more over the most recent

calendar quarter; and

(ii)(A) For which the exchange sells its price information

regarding the contract to market participants or industry publications;

or

(B) Whose daily closing or settlement prices on 95 percent or more

of the days in the most recent quarter were within 2.5 percent of the

contemporaneously determined closing, settlement or other daily price

of another agreement, contract or transaction.

(3) Procedure for significant price discovery determination. Before

making a final price discovery determination under this paragraph, the

Commission shall publish notice in the Federal Register that it intends

to undertake a determination with respect to whether a particular

agreement, contract or transaction performs a significant price

discovery function and to receive written data, views and arguments

relevant to its determination from the electronic trading facility and

other interested persons. Any such written data, views and arguments

shall be filed with the Secretary of the Commission, in the form and

manner specified by the Commission, within 30 calendar days of

publication of notice in the Federal Register or within such other time

specified by the Commission. After prompt consideration of all relevant

information, the Commission shall, within a reasonable period of time

after the close of the comment period, issue an order explaining its

determination whether the agreement, contract or transaction executed

or traded by the electronic trading facility performs a significant

price discovery function under the criteria specified in paragraph

(d)(1)(i) through (v) of this section.

(4) Compliance with core principles. (i) Following the issuance of

an order by the Commission that the electronic trading facility

executes or trades an agreement, contract or transaction that performs

a significant price discovery function, the electronic trading facility

must demonstrate, with respect to that agreement, contract or

transaction, compliance with the Core Principles set forth in this

section and the applicable provisions of this part. If the Commission's

order represents the first time it has determined that one of the

electronic trading facility's agreements, contracts or transactions

performs a significant price discovery function, the facility must

submit a written demonstration of compliance with the Core Principles

within 90 calendar days of the date of the Commission's order. For each

subsequent determination by the Commission that the electronic trading

facility has an additional agreement, contract or transaction that

performs a significant price discovery function, the facility must

submit a written demonstration of compliance with the Core Principles

within 30 calendar days of the date of the Commission's order.

Attention is directed to Appendix B of this part for guidance on and

acceptable practices for complying with the Core Principles.

Submissions demonstrating how the electronic trading facility complies

with the Core Principles with respect to its significant price

discovery contract must be filed with the Secretary of the Commission

at its Washington, DC headquarters. Submissions must include the

following:

(A) A written certification that the significant price discovery

contract(s) complies with the Act and regulations thereunder;

(B) A copy of the electronic trading facility's rules (as defined

in Sec. 40.1 of this chapter) and any technical manuals, other guides

or instructions for users of, or participants in, the market, including

minimum financial standards for members or market participants.

Subsequent rule changes must be certified by the electronic trading

facility pursuant to section 5c(c) of the Act and Sec. 40.6 of this

chapter. The electronic trading facility also may request Commission

approval of any

[[Page 66339]]

rule changes pursuant to section 5c(c) of the Act and Sec. 40.5 of

this chapter;

(C) A description of the trading system, algorithm, security and

access limitation procedures with a timeline for an order from input

through settlement, and a copy of any system test procedures, tests

conducted, test results and contingency or disaster recovery plans;

(D) A copy of any documents pertaining to or describing the

electronic trading system's legal status and governance structure,

including governance fitness information;

(E) An executed or executable copy of any agreements or contracts

entered into or to be entered into by the electronic trading facility,

including partnership or limited liability company, third-party

regulatory service, or member or user agreements, that enable or

empower the electronic trading facility to comply with a Core

Principle;

(F) A copy of any manual or other document describing, with

specificity, the manner in which the trading facility will conduct

trade practice, market and financial surveillance;

(G) To the extent that any of the items in paragraphs (d)(4)(i)(A)

through (F) of this section raise issues that are novel, or for which

compliance with a Core Principle is not self-evident, an explanation of

how that item satisfies the applicable Core Principle or Principles.

(ii) The electronic trading facility must identify with

particularity information in the submission that will be subject to a

request for confidential treatment pursuant to Sec. 145.09 of this

chapter. The electronic trading facility must follow the procedures

specified in Sec. 40.8 of this chapter with respect to any information

in its submission for which confidential treatment is requested.

(5) Determination of compliance with core principles. The

Commission shall take into consideration differences between cleared

and uncleared significant price discovery contracts when reviewing the

implementation of the Core Principles by an electronic trading

facility. The electronic facility has reasonable discretion in

accounting for differences between cleared and uncleared significant

price discovery contracts when establishing the manner in which it

complies with the Core Principles.

(6) Information relating to compliance with core principles. Upon

request by the Commission, an electronic trading facility trading a

significant price discovery contract shall file with the Commission a

written demonstration, containing such supporting data, information and

documents, in the form and manner and within such time as the

Commission may specify, that the electronic trading facility is in

compliance with one or more Core Principles as specified in the

request, or that is otherwise requested by the Commission to enable the

Commission to satisfy its obligations under the Act.

(7) Enforceability. An agreement, contract or transaction entered

into on or pursuant to the rules of an electronic trading facility

trading or executing a significant price discovery contract shall not

be void, voidable, subject to rescission or otherwise invalidated or

rendered unenforceable as a result of:

(i) A violation by the electronic trading facility of the

provisions set forth in this section; or

(ii) Any Commission proceeding to alter or supplement a rule, term

or condition under section 8a(7) of the Act, to declare an emergency

under section 8a(9) of the Act, or any other proceeding the effect of

which is to alter, supplement or require an electronic trading facility

to adopt a specific term or condition, trading rule or procedure, or to

take or refrain from taking a specific action.

(8) Procedures for vacating a determination of a significant price

discovery function--(i) By the electronic trading facility. An

electronic trading facility that executes or trades an agreement,

contract or transaction that the Commission has determined performs a

significant price discovery function under paragraph (d)(3) of this

section may petition the Commission to vacate that determination. The

petition shall demonstrate that the agreement, contract or transaction

no longer performs a significant price discovery function under the

criteria specified in paragraph (d)(1), and has not done so for at

least the prior 12 months. An electronic trading facility shall not

petition for a vacation of a significant price discovery determination

more frequently than once every 12 months for any individual contract.

(ii) By the Commission. The Commission may, on its own initiative,

begin vacation proceedings if it believes that an agreement, contract

or transaction has not performed a significant price discovery function

for at least the prior 12 months.

(iii) Procedure. Before making a final determination whether an

agreement, contract or transaction has ceased to perform a significant

price discovery function, the Commission shall publish notice in the

Federal Register that it intends to undertake such a determination and

to receive written data, views and arguments relevant to its

determination from the electronic trading facility and other interested

persons. Written submissions shall be filed with the Secretary of the

Commission in the form and manner specified by the Commission, within

30 calendar days of publication of notice in the Federal Register, or

within such other time specified by the Commission. After consideration

of all relevant information, the Commission shall issue an order

explaining its determination whether the agreement, contract or

transaction has ceased to perform a significant price discovery

function and, if so, vacating its prior order. If such an order issues,

and the Commission subsequently determines, on its own initiative or

after notification by the electronic trading facility, that the

agreement, contract or transaction that was subject to the vacation

order again performs a significant price discovery function, the

electronic trading facility must comply with the Core Principles within

30 calendar days of the date of the Commission's order.

(iv) Automatic vacation of significant price discovery

determination. Regardless of whether a proceeding to vacate has been

initiated, any significant price discovery contract that has no open

interest and in which no trading has occurred for a period of 12

complete and consecutive calendar months shall, without further

proceedings, no longer be considered to be a significant price

discovery contract.

(e) Commission review. The Commission shall, at least annually,

evaluate as appropriate agreements, contracts or transactions conducted

on an electronic trading facility in reliance on the exemption set

forth in this section to determine whether they serve a significant

price discovery function as set forth in paragraph (d)(1) of this

section.

0

71. Amend Appendix A to part 36 by revising introductory paragraph 1,

the headings to paragraphs (A), (B), and (C), and paragraphs (D)2. and

(D)4., to read as follows:

Appendix A to Part 36--Guidance on Specific Price Discovery Contracts

1. There are four factors that the Commission must consider, as

appropriate, in making a determination that a contract is performing

a significant price discovery function. The four factors prescribed

by the statute are: Price Linkage; Arbitrage; Material Price

Reference; and Material Liquidity.

* * * * *

(A) MATERIAL LIQUIDITY--The extent to which the volume of

agreements, contracts or transactions in the commodity being traded

on the electronic trading facility is sufficient to have a material

effect on other agreements, contracts or transactions listed for

trading on or subject to the rules of a designated

[[Page 66340]]

contract market, or an electronic trading facility operating in

reliance on the exemption set forth in this section.

* * * * *

(B) PRICE LINKAGE--The extent to which the agreement, contract

or transaction uses or otherwise relies on a daily or final

settlement price, or other major price parameter, of a contract or

contracts listed for trading on or subject to the rules of a

designated contract market, or a significant price discovery

contract traded on an electronic trading facility, to value a

position, transfer or convert a position, cash or financially settle

a position, or close out a position.

* * * * *

(C) ARBITRAGE CONTRACTS--The extent to which the price for the

agreement, contract or transaction is sufficiently related to the

price of a contract or contracts listed for trading on or subject to

the rules of a designated contract market or a significant price

discovery contract or contracts trading on or subject to the rules

of an electronic trading facility, so as to permit market

participants to effectively arbitrage between the markets by

simultaneously maintaining positions or executing trades in the

contracts on a frequent and recurring basis.

* * * * *

(D) * * *

2. In evaluating a contract's price discovery role as a directly

referenced price source, the Commission will perform an analysis to

determine whether cash market participants are quoting bid or offer

prices or entering into transactions at prices that are set either

explicitly or implicitly at a differential to prices established for

the contract. Cash market prices are set explicitly at a

differential to the contract being traded on the electronic trading

facility when, for instance, they are quoted in dollars and cents

above or below the reference contract's price. Cash market prices

are set implicitly at a differential to a contract being traded on

the electronic trading facility when, for instance, they are arrived

at after adding to, or subtracting from the contract being traded on

the electronic trading facility, but then quoted or reported at a

flat price. The Commission will also consider whether cash market

entities are quoting cash prices based on a contract being traded on

the electronic trading facility on a frequent and recurring basis.

* * * * *

4. In applying this criterion, consideration will be given to

whether prices established by a contract being traded on the

electronic trading facility are reported in a widely distributed

industry publication. In making this determination, the Commission

will consider the reputation of the publication within the industry,

how frequently it is published, and whether the information

contained in the publication is routinely consulted by industry

participants in pricing cash market transactions.

* * * * *

0

72. Revise Appendix B to part 36 to read as follows:

Appendix B to Part 36--Guidance on, and Acceptable Practices in,

Compliance With Core Principles

1. This Appendix provides guidance on complying with the core

principles set forth in this part, both initially and on an ongoing

basis. The guidance is provided in paragraph (a) following each core

principle and can be used to demonstrate to the Commission core

principle compliance under Sec. 36.3(d)(4). The guidance for each

core principle is illustrative only of the types of matters an

electronic trading facility may address, as applicable, and is not

intended to be used as a mandatory checklist. Addressing the issues

and questions set forth in this guidance will help the Commission in

its consideration of whether the electronic trading facility is in

compliance with the core principles. A submission pursuant to Sec.

36.3(d)(4) should include an explanation or other form of

documentation demonstrating that the electronic trading facility

complies with the core principles.

2. Acceptable practices meeting selected requirements of the

core principles are set forth in paragraph (b) following each core

principle. Electronic trading facilities on which significant price

discovery contracts are traded or executed that follow the specific

practices outlined under paragraph (b) for any core principle in

this appendix will meet the selected requirements of the applicable

core principle. Paragraph (b) is for illustrative purposes only, and

does not state the exclusive means for satisfying a core principle.

CORE PRINCIPLE I--CONTRACTS NOT READILY SUSCEPTIBLE TO

MANIPULATION. The electronic trading facility shall list only

significant price discovery contracts that are not readily

susceptible to manipulation.

(a) Guidance. Upon determination by the Commission that a

contract listed for trading on an electronic trading facility is a

significant price discovery contract, the electronic trading

facility must self-certify the terms and conditions of the

significant price discovery contract under Sec. 36.3(d)(4) within

90 calendar days of the date of the Commission's order if the

contract is the electronic trading facility's first significant

price discovery contract; or 30 days from the date of the

Commission's order if the contract is not the electronic trading

facility's first significant price discovery contract. Once the

Commission determines that a contract performs a significant price

discovery function, subsequent rule changes must be self-certified

to the Commission by the electronic trading facility pursuant to

Sec. 40.6 of this chapter or submitted to the Commission for review

and approval pursuant to Sec. 40.5 of this chapter.

(b) Acceptable practices. Guideline No. 1, 17 CFR part 40,

Appendix A may be used as guidance in meeting this core principle

for significant price discovery contracts.

CORE PRINCIPLE II--MONITORING OF TRADING. The electronic trading

facility shall monitor trading in significant price discovery

contracts to prevent market manipulation, price distortion, and

disruptions of the delivery of cash-settlement process through

market surveillance, compliance and disciplinary practices and

procedures, including methods for conducting real-time monitoring of

trading and comprehensive and accurate trade reconstructions.

(a) Guidance. An electronic trading facility on which

significant price discovery contracts are traded or executed should,

with respect to those contracts, demonstrate a capacity to prevent

market manipulation and have trading and participation rules to

detect and deter abuses. The facility should seek to prevent market

manipulation and other trading abuses through a dedicated regulatory

department or by delegation of that function to an appropriate third

party. An electronic trading facility also should have the authority

to intervene as necessary to maintain an orderly market.

(b) Acceptable practices--(1) An acceptable trade monitoring

program. An acceptable trade monitoring program should facilitate,

on both a routine and non-routine basis, arrangements and resources

to detect and deter abuses through direct surveillance of each

significant price discovery contract. Direct surveillance of each

significant price discovery contract will generally involve the

collection of various market data, including information on

participants' market activity. Those data should be evaluated on an

ongoing basis in order to make an appropriate regulatory response to

potential market disruptions or abusive practices. For contracts

with a substantial number of participants, an effective surveillance

program should employ a much more comprehensive large trader

reporting system.

(2) Authority to collect information and documents. The

electronic trading facility should have the authority to collect

information and documents in order to reconstruct trading for

appropriate market analysis. Appropriate market analysis should

enable the electronic trading facility to assess whether each

significant price discovery contract is responding to the forces of

supply and demand. Appropriate data usually include various

fundamental data about the underlying commodity, its supply, its

demand, and its movement through market channels. Especially

important are data related to the size and ownership of deliverable

supplies--the existing supply and the future or potential supply--

and to the pricing of the deliverable commodity relative to the

futures price and relative to the similar, but non-deliverable,

kinds of the commodity. For cash-settled contracts, it is more

appropriate to pay attention to the availability and pricing of the

commodity making up the index to which the contract will be settled,

as well as monitoring the continued suitability of the methodology

for deriving the index.

(3) Ability to assess participants' market activity and power.

To assess participants' activity and potential power in a market,

electronic trading facilities, with respect to significant price

discovery contracts, at a minimum should have routine access to the

positions and trading of its participants and, if applicable, should

provide for such access through its agreements with its third-party

provider of clearing services.

[[Page 66341]]

CORE PRINCIPLE III--ABILITY TO OBTAIN INFORMATION. The

electronic trading facility shall establish and enforce rules that

allow the electronic trading facility to obtain any necessary

information to perform any of the functions set forth in this

subparagraph, provide the information to the Commission upon

request, and have the capacity to carry out such international

information-sharing agreements as the Commission may require.

(a) Guidance. An electronic trading facility on which

significant price discovery contracts are traded or executed should,

with respect to those contracts, have the ability and authority to

collect information and documents on both a routine and non-routine

basis, including the examination of books and records kept by

participants. This includes having arrangements and resources for

recording full data entry and trade details and safely storing audit

trail data. An electronic trading facility should have systems

sufficient to enable it to use the information for purposes of

assisting in the prevention of participant and market abuses through

reconstruction of trading and providing evidence of any violations

of the electronic trading facility's rules.

(b) Acceptable practices--(1) The goal of an audit trail is to

detect and deter market abuse. An effective contract audit trail

should capture and retain sufficient trade-related information to

permit electronic trading facility staff to detect trading abuses

and to reconstruct all transactions within a reasonable period of

time. An audit trail should include specialized electronic

surveillance programs that identify potentially abusive trades and

trade patterns. An acceptable audit trail must be able to track an

order from time of entry into the trading system through its fill.

The electronic trading facility must create and maintain an

electronic transaction history database that contains information

with respect to transactions executed on each significant price

discovery contract.

(2) An acceptable audit trail should include the following:

original source documents, transaction history, electronic analysis

capability, and safe storage capability. An acceptable audit trail

system would satisfy the following practices.

(i) Original source documents. Original source documents include

unalterable, sequentially identified records on which trade

execution information is originally recorded. For each order

(whether filled, unfilled or cancelled, each of which should be

retained or electronically captured), such records reflect the terms

of the order, an account identifier that relates back to the

account(s) owner(s), and the time of order entry.

(ii) Transaction history. A transaction history consists of an

electronic history of each transaction, including:

(A) All the data that are input into the trade entry or matching

system for the transaction to match and clear;

(B) Timing and sequencing data adequate to reconstruct trading;

and

(C) The identification of each account to which fills are

allocated.

(iii) Electronic analysis capability. An electronic analysis

capability permits sorting and presenting data included in the

transaction history so as to reconstruct trading and to identify

possible trading violations with respect to market abuse.

(iv) Safe storage capability. Safe storage capability provides

for a method of storing the data included in the transaction history

in a manner that protects the data from unauthorized alteration, as

well as from accidental erasure or other loss. Data should be

retained in the form and manner specified by the Commission or,

where no acceptable manner of retention is specified, in accordance

with the recordkeeping standards of Sec. 1.31 of this chapter.

(3) Arrangements and resources for the disclosure of the

obtained information and documents to the Commission upon request.

The electronic trading facility should maintain records of all

information and documents related to each significant price

discovery contract in a form and manner acceptable to the

Commission. Where no acceptable manner of maintenance is specified,

records should be maintained in accordance with the recordkeeping

standards of Sec. 1.31 of this chapter.

(4) The capacity to carry out appropriate information-sharing

agreements as the Commission may require. Appropriate information-

sharing agreements could be established with other markets or the

Commission can act in conjunction with the electronic trading

facility to carry out such information sharing.

CORE PRINCIPLE IV--POSITION LIMITATIONS OR ACCOUNTABILITY. The

electronic trading facility shall adopt, where necessary and

appropriate, position limitations or position accountability for

speculators in significant price discovery contracts, taking into

account positions in other agreements, contracts and transactions

that are treated by a derivatives clearing organization, whether

registered or not registered, as fungible with such significant

price discovery contracts to reduce the potential threat of market

manipulation or congestion, especially during trading in the

delivery month.

(a) Guidance. [Reserved]

(b) Acceptable practices for uncleared trades. [Reserved]

(c) Acceptable practices for cleared trades--(1) Introduction.

In order to diminish potential problems arising from excessively

large speculative positions, and to facilitate orderly liquidation

of expiring contracts, an electronic trading facility relying on the

exemption set forth in this section should adopt rules that set

position limits or accountability levels on traders' cleared

positions in significant price discovery contracts. These position

limit rules specifically may exempt bona fide hedging; permit other

exemptions; or set limits differently by market, delivery month or

time period. For the purpose of evaluating a significant price

discovery contract's speculative-limit program for cleared

positions, the Commission will consider the specified position

limits or accountability levels, aggregation policies, types of

exemptions allowed, methods for monitoring compliance with the

specified limits or levels, and procedures for dealing with

violations.

(2) Accounting for cleared trades--(i) Speculative-limit levels

typically should be set in terms of a trader's combined position

involving cleared trades in a significant price discovery contract,

plus positions in agreements, contracts and transactions that are

treated by a derivatives clearing organization, whether registered

or not registered, as fungible with such significant price discovery

contract. (This circumstance typically exists where an exempt

commercial market lists a particular contract for trading but also

allows for positions in that contract to be cleared together with

positions established through bilateral or off-exchange

transactions, such as block trades, in the same contract.

Essentially, both the on-facility and off-facility transactions are

considered fungible with each other.) In this connection, the

electronic trading facility should make arrangements to ensure that

it is able to ascertain accurate position data for the market.

(ii) For significant price discovery contracts that are traded

on a cleared basis, the electronic trading facility should apply

position limits to cleared transactions in the contract.

(3) Limitations on spot-month positions. Spot-month limits

should be adopted for significant price discovery contracts to

minimize the susceptibility of the market to manipulation or price

distortions, including squeezes and corners or other abusive trading

practices.

(i) Contracts economically equivalent to an existing contract.

An electronic trading facility that lists a significant price

discovery contract that is economically-equivalent to another

significant price discovery contract or to a contract traded on a

designated contract market should set the spot-month limit for its

significant price discovery contract at the same level as that

specified for the economically-equivalent contract.

(ii) Contracts that are not economically equivalent to an

existing contract. There may not be an economically-equivalent

significant price discovery contract or economically-equivalent

contract traded on a designated contract market. In this case, the

spot-month speculative position limit should be established in the

following manner. The spot-month limit for a physical delivery

market should be based upon an analysis of deliverable supplies and

the history of spot-month liquidations. The spot-month limit for a

physical-delivery market is appropriately set at no more than 25

percent of the estimated deliverable supply. In the case where a

significant price discovery contract has a cash settlement

provision, the spot-month limit should be set at a level that

minimizes the potential for price manipulation or distortion in the

significant price discovery contract itself; in related futures and

options contracts traded on a designated contract market; in other

significant price discovery contracts; in other fungible agreements,

contracts and transactions; and in the underlying commodity.

(4) Position accountability for non-spot-month positions. The

electronic trading facility should establish for its significant

price discovery contracts non-spot individual

[[Page 66342]]

month position accountability levels and all-months-combined

position accountability levels. An electronic trading facility may

establish non-spot individual month position limits and all-months-

combined position limits for its significant price discovery

contracts in lieu of position accountability levels.

(i) Definition. Position accountability provisions provide a

means for an exchange to monitor traders' positions that may

threaten orderly trading. An acceptable accountability provision

sets target accountability threshold levels that may be exceeded,

but once a trader breaches such accountability levels, the

electronic trading facility should initiate an inquiry to determine

whether the individual's trading activity is justified and is not

intended to manipulate the market. As part of its investigation, the

electronic trading facility may inquire about the trader's rationale

for holding a position in excess of the accountability levels. An

acceptable accountability provision should provide the electronic

trading facility with the authority to order the trader not to

further increase positions. If a trader fails to comply with a

request for information about positions held, provides information

that does not sufficiently justify the position, or continues to

increase contract positions after a request not to do so is issued

by the facility, then the accountability provision should enable the

electronic trading facility to require the trader to reduce

positions.

(ii) Contracts economically equivalent to an existing contract.

When an electronic trading facility lists a significant price

discovery contract that is economically equivalent to another

significant price discovery contract or to a contract traded on a

designated contract market, the electronic trading facility should

set the non-spot individual month position accountability level and

all-months-combined position accountability level for its

significant price discovery contract at the same levels, or lower,

as those specified for the economically-equivalent contract.

(iii) Contracts that are not economically equivalent to an

existing contract. For significant price discovery contracts that

are not economically equivalent to an existing contract, the trading

facility shall adopt non-spot individual month and all-months-

combined position accountability levels that are no greater than 10

percent of the average combined futures and delta-adjusted option

month-end open interest for the most recent calendar year. For

electronic trading facilities that choose to adopt non-spot

individual month and all-months-combined position limits in lieu of

position accountability levels for their significant price discovery

contracts, the limits should be set in the same manner as the

accountability levels.

(iv) Contracts economically equivalent to an existing contract

with position limits. If a significant price discovery contract is

economically equivalent to another significant price discovery

contract or to a contract traded on a designated contract market

that has adopted non-spot or all-months-combined position limits,

the electronic trading facility should set non-spot month position

limits and all-months-combined position limits for its significant

price discovery contract at the same (or lower) levels as those

specified for the economically-equivalent contract.

(5) Account aggregation. An electronic trading facility should

have aggregation rules for significant price discovery contracts

that apply to accounts under common control, those with common

ownership, i.e., where there is a ten percent or greater financial

interest, and those traded according to an express or implied

agreement. Such aggregation rules should apply to cleared

transactions with respect to applicable speculative position limits.

An electronic trading facility will be permitted to set more

stringent aggregation policies. An electronic trading facility may

grant exemptions to its price discovery contracts' position limits

for bona fide hedging (as defined in Sec. 1.3(z) of this chapter)

and may grant exemptions for reduced risk positions, such as

spreads, straddles and arbitrage positions.

(6) Implementation deadlines. An electronic trading facility

with a significant price discovery contract is required to comply

with Core Principle IV within 90 calendar days of the date of the

Commission's order determining that the contract performs a

significant price discovery function if such contract is the

electronic trading facility's first significant price discovery

contract, or within 30 days of the date of the Commission's order if

such contract is not the electronic trading facility's first

significant price discovery contract. For the purpose of applying

limits on speculative positions in newly-determined significant

price discovery contracts, the Commission will permit a grace period

following issuance of its order for traders with cleared positions

in such contracts to become compliant with applicable position limit

rules. Traders who hold cleared positions on a net basis in the

electronic trading facility's significant price discovery contract

must be at or below the specified position limit level no later than

90 calendar days from the date of the electronic trading facility's

implementation of position limit rules, unless a hedge exemption is

granted by the electronic trading facility. This grace period

applies to both initial and subsequent price discovery contracts.

Electronic trading facilities should notify traders of this

requirement promptly upon implementation of such rules.

(7) Enforcement provisions. The electronic trading facility

should have appropriate procedures in place to monitor its position

limit and accountability provisions and to address violations.

(i) An electronic trading facility with significant price

discovery contracts should use an automated means of detecting

traders' violations of speculative limits or exemptions,

particularly if the significant price discovery contracts have large

numbers of traders. An electronic trading facility should monitor

the continuing appropriateness of approved exemptions by

periodically reviewing each trader's basis for exemption or

requiring a reapplication. An automated system also should be used

to determine whether a trader has exceeded applicable non-spot

individual month position accountability levels and all-months-

combined position accountability levels.

(ii) An electronic trading facility should establish a program

for effective enforcement of position limits for significant price

discovery contracts. Electronic trading facilities should use a

large trader reporting system to monitor and enforce daily

compliance with position limit rules. The Commission notes that an

electronic trading facility may allow traders to periodically apply

to the electronic trading facility for an exemption and, if

appropriate, be granted a position level higher than the applicable

speculative limit. The electronic trading facility should establish

a program to monitor approved exemptions from the limits. The

position levels granted under such hedge exemptions generally should

be based upon the trader's commercial activity in related markets

including, but not limited to, positions held in related futures and

options contracts listed for trading on designated contract markets,

fungible agreements, contracts and transactions, as determined by a

derivatives clearing organization. Electronic trading facilities may

allow a brief grace period where a qualifying trader may exceed

speculative limits or an existing exemption level pending the

submission and approval of appropriate justification. An electronic

trading facility should consider whether it wants to restrict

exemptions during the last several days of trading in a delivery

month. Acceptable procedures for obtaining and granting exemptions

include a requirement that the electronic trading facility approve a

specific maximum higher level.

(iii) An acceptable speculative limit program should have

specific policies for taking regulatory action once a violation of a

position limit or exemption is detected. The electronic trading

facility policies should consider appropriate actions.

(8) Violation of Commission rules. A violation of position

limits for significant price discovery contracts that have been

self-certified by an electronic trading facility is also a violation

of section 4a(e) of the Act.

CORE PRINCIPLE V--EMERGENCY AUTHORITY. The electronic trading

facility shall adopt rules to provide for the exercise of emergency

authority, in consultation or cooperation with the Commission, where

necessary and appropriate, including the authority to liquidate open

positions in significant price discovery contracts and to suspend or

curtail trading in a significant price discovery contract.

(a) Guidance. An electronic trading facility on which

significant price discovery contracts are traded should have clear

procedures and guidelines for decision-making regarding emergency

intervention in the market, including procedures and guidelines to

avoid conflicts of interest while carrying out such decision-making.

An electronic trading facility on which significant price discovery

contracts are executed or traded should also have the authority to

intervene as necessary to maintain markets with fair and orderly

trading as well as procedures for carrying out the intervention.

Procedures and guidelines should include notifying the Commission of

[[Page 66343]]

the exercise of the electronic trading facility's regulatory

emergency authority, explaining how conflicts of interest are

minimized, and documenting the electronic trading facility's

decision-making process and the reasons for using its emergency

action authority. Information on steps taken under such procedures

should be included in a submission of a certified rule and any

related submissions for rule approval pursuant to part 40 of this

chapter, when carried out pursuant to an electronic trading

facility's emergency authority. To address perceived market threats,

the electronic trading facility on which significant price discovery

contracts are executed or traded should, among other things, be able

to impose position limits in the delivery month, impose or modify

price limits, modify circuit breakers, call for additional margin

either from market participants or clearing members (for contracts

that are cleared through a clearinghouse), order the liquidation or

transfer of open positions, order the fixing of a settlement price,

order a reduction in positions, extend or shorten the expiration

date or the trading hours, suspend or curtail trading on the

electronic trading facility, order the transfer of contracts and the

margin for such contracts from one market participant to another, or

alter the delivery terms or conditions or, if applicable, should

provide for such actions through its agreements with its third-party

provider of clearing services.

(b) Acceptable practices. [Reserved]

CORE PRINCIPLE VI--DAILY PUBLICATION OF TRADING INFORMATION. The

electronic trading facility shall make public daily information on

price, trading volume, and other trading data to the extent

appropriate for significant price discovery contracts.

(a) Guidance. An electronic trading facility, with respect to

significant price discovery contracts, should provide to the public

information regarding settlement prices, price range, volume, open

interest, and other related market information for all applicable

contracts as determined by the Commission on a fair, equitable and

timely basis. Provision of information for any applicable contract

can be through such means as provision of the information to a

financial information service or by timely placement of the

information on the electronic trading facility's public Web site.

(b) Acceptable practices. Compliance with Sec. 16.01 of this

chapter, which is mandatory, is an acceptable practice that

satisfies the requirements of Core Principle VI.

CORE PRINCIPLE VII--COMPLIANCE WITH RULES. The electronic

trading facility shall monitor and enforce compliance with the rules

of the electronic trading facility, including the terms and

conditions of any contracts to be traded and any limitations on

access to the electronic trading facility.

(a) Guidance--(1) An electronic trading facility on which

significant price discovery contracts are executed or traded should

have appropriate arrangements and resources for effective trade

practice surveillance programs, with the authority to collect

information and documents on both a routine and non-routine basis,

including the examination of books and records kept by its market

participants. The arrangements and resources should facilitate the

direct supervision of the market and the analysis of data collected.

Trade practice surveillance programs may be carried out by the

electronic trading facility itself or through delegation or

contracting-out to a third party. If the electronic trading facility

on which significant price discovery contracts are executed or

traded delegates or contracts-out the trade practice surveillance

responsibility to a third party, such third party should have the

capacity and authority to carry out such programs, and the

electronic trading facility should retain appropriate supervisory

authority over the third party.

(2) An electronic trading facility on which significant price

discovery contracts are executed or traded should have arrangements,

resources and authority for effective rule enforcement. The

Commission believes that this should include the authority and

ability to discipline and limit or suspend the activities of a

market participant as well as the authority and ability to terminate

the activities of a market participant pursuant to clear and fair

standards. The electronic trading facility can satisfy this

criterion for market participants by expelling or denying such

person's future access upon a determination that such a person has

violated the electronic trading facility's rules.

(b) Acceptable practices. An acceptable trade practice

surveillance program generally would include:

(1) Maintenance of data reflecting the details of each

transaction executed on the electronic trading facility;

(2) Electronic analysis of this data routinely to detect

potential trading violations;

(3) Appropriate and thorough investigative analysis of these and

other potential trading violations brought to the electronic trading

facility's attention; and

(4) Prompt and effective disciplinary action for any violation

that is found to have been committed. The Commission believes that

the latter element should include the authority and ability to

discipline and limit or suspend the activities of a market

participant pursuant to clear and fair standards that are available

to market participants. See, e.g., 17 CFR part 8.

CORE PRINCIPLE VIII--CONFLICTS OF INTEREST. The electronic

trading facility on which significant price discovery contracts are

executed or traded shall establish and enforce rules to minimize

conflicts of interest in the decision-making process of the

electronic trading facility and establish a process for resolving

such conflicts of interest.

(a) Guidance. (1) The means to address conflicts of interest in

the decision-making of an electronic trading facility on which

significant price discovery contracts are executed or traded should

include methods to ascertain the presence of conflicts of interest

and to make decisions in the event of such a conflict. In addition,

the Commission believes that the electronic trading facility on

which significant price discovery contracts are executed or traded

should provide for appropriate limitations on the use or disclosure

of material non-public information gained through the performance of

official duties by board members, committee members and electronic

trading facility employees or gained through an ownership interest

in the electronic trading facility or its parent organization(s).

(2) All electronic trading facilities on which significant price

discovery contracts are traded bear special responsibility to

regulate effectively, impartially, and with due consideration of the

public interest, as provided in section 3 of the Act. Under Core

Principle VIII, they are also required to minimize conflicts of

interest in their decision-making processes. To comply with this

core principle, electronic trading facilities on which significant

price discovery contracts are traded should be particularly vigilant

for such conflicts between and among any of their self-regulatory

responsibilities, their commercial interests, and the several

interests of their management, members, owners, market participants,

other industry participants and other constituencies.

(b) Acceptable practices. [Reserved]

CORE PRINCIPLE IX--ANTITRUST CONSIDERATIONS. Unless necessary or

appropriate to achieve the purposes of this Act, the electronic

trading facility, with respect to any significant price discovery

contracts, shall endeavor to avoid adopting any rules or taking any

actions that result in any unreasonable restraints of trade or

imposing any material anticompetitive burden on trading on the

electronic trading facility.

(a) Guidance. An electronic trading facility, with respect to a

significant price discovery contract, may at any time request that

the Commission consider under the provisions of section 15(b) of the

Act any of the electronic trading facility's rules, which may be

trading protocols or policies, operational rules, or terms or

conditions of any significant price discovery contract. The

Commission intends to apply section 15(b) of the Act to its

consideration of issues under this core principle in a manner

consistent with that previously applied to contract markets.

(b) Acceptable practices. [Reserved]

PART 38--DESIGNATED CONTRACT MARKETS

0

73. The authority citation for part 38 continues to read as follows:

Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1a, 2, 6, 6a, 6c, 6d, 6e, 6f, 6g, 6i, 6j,

6k, 6l, 6m, 6n, 7, 7a-2, 7b, 7b-1, 7b-3, 8, 9, 15, and 21, as

amended by the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection

Act, Pub. L. 111-203,124 Stat. 1376 (2010).

0

74. Revise Sec. 38.2 to read as follows:

Sec. 38.2 Exempt provisions.

A designated contract market, the designated contract market's

operator and transactions traded on or through a designated contract

market under section 5 of the Act shall comply with all applicable

regulations under Title 17

[[Page 66344]]

of the Code of Federal Regulations, except for the requirements of

Sec. 1.39(b), Sec. 1.44, Sec. 1.53, Sec. 1.54, Sec. 1.59(b) and

(c), Sec. 1.62, Sec. 1.63(a) and (b) and (d) through (f), Sec. 1.64,

Sec. 1.69, part 8, Sec. 100.1, Sec. 155.2, and part 156.

PART 41--SECURITY FUTURES PRODUCTS

0

75. The authority citation for part 41 continues to read as follows:

Authority: Sections 206, 251 and 252, Pub. L. 106-554, 114 Stat.

2763, 7 U.S.C. 1a, 2, 6f, 6j, 7a-2, 12a; 15 U.S.C. 78g(c)(2).

0

76. Revise paragraph (e) of Sec. 41.1 to read as follows:

Sec. 41.1 Definitions

* * * * *

(e) Narrow-based security index has the same meaning as in section

1a(35) of the Commodity Exchange Act.

* * * * *

0

77. Revise Sec. 41.2 to read as follows:

Sec. 41.2 Required records.

A designated contract market that trades a security index or

security futures product shall maintain in accordance with the

requirements of Sec. 1.31 of this chapter books and records of all

activities related to the trading of such products, including: Records

related to any determination under subpart B of this part whether or

not a futures contract on a security index is a narrow-based security

index or a broad-based security index.

0

78. Amend Sec. 41.11 by revising paragraphs (a) introductory text,

(b)(1) introductory text, (b)(2) introductory text, (c), and (d)(5)

introductory text to read as follows:

Sec. 41.11 Method for determining market capitalization and dollar

value of average daily trading volume; application of the definition of

narrow-based security index.

(a) Market capitalization. For purposes of section 1a(35)(B) of the

Act (7 U.S.C. 1a(35)(B)):

* * * * *

(b) * * *

(1) For purposes of section 1a(35)(A) and (B) of the Act (7 U.S.C.

1a(35)(A) and (B)):

* * * * *

(2) For purposes of section 1a(35)(B)(III)(cc) of the Act (7 U.S.C.

1a(35)(B)(III)(cc)):

* * * * *

(c) Depositary Shares and Section 12 Registration. For purposes of

section 1a(35)(B)(III)(aa) of the Act (7 U.S.C. 1a(35)(B)(III)(aa)),

the requirement that each component security of an index be registered

pursuant to section 12 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15

U.S.C. 78l) shall be satisfied with respect to any security that is a

depositary share if the deposited securities underlying the depositary

share are registered pursuant to section 12 of the Securities Exchange

Act of 1934 and the depositary share is registered under the Securities

Act of 1933 (15 U.S.C. 77a et seq.) on Form F-6 (17 CFR 239.36).

(d) * * *

(5) Lowest weighted 25% of an index. With respect to any particular

day, the lowest weighted component securities comprising, in the

aggregate, 25% of an index's weighting for purposes of section

1a(35)(A)(iv) of the Act (7 U.S.C. 1a(35)(A)(iv)) (``lowest weighted

25% of an index'') means those securities:

* * * * *

0

79. Revise paragraph (a) introductory text of Sec. 41.12 to read as

follows:

Sec. 41.12 Indexes underlying futures contracts trading for fewer

than 30 days.

(a) An index on which a contract of sale for future delivery is

trading on a designated contract market or foreign board of trade is

not a narrow-based security index under section 1a(35) of the Act (7

U.S.C. 1a(35)) for the first 30 days of trading, if:

* * * * *

0

80. Revise Sec. 41.13 to read as follows:

Sec. 41.13 Futures contracts on security indexes trading on or

subject to the rules of a foreign board of trade.

When a contract of sale for future delivery on a security index is

traded on or subject to the rules of a foreign board of trade, such

index shall not be a narrow-based security index if it would not be a

narrow-based security index if a futures contract on such index were

traded on a designated contract market.

0

81. Revise paragraphs (a)(1), (a)(3), (b)(1), (b)(2), and (b)(4) of

Sec. 41.21 to read as follows:

Sec. 41.21 Requirements for underlying securities.

(a) * * *

(1) The underlying security is registered pursuant to section 12 of

the Securities Exchange Act of 1934;

* * * * *

(3) The underlying security conforms with the listing standards for

the security futures product that the designated contract market has

filed with the SEC under section 19(b) of the Securities Exchange Act

of 1934.

(b) * * *

(1) The index is a narrow-based security index as defined in

section 1a(35) of the Act;

(2) The securities in the index are registered pursuant to section

12 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934;

* * * * *

(4) The index conforms with the listing standards for the security

futures product that the designated contract market has filed with the

SEC under section 19(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.

0

82. Revise the introductory text and paragraph (e) of Sec. 41.22 to

read as follows:

Sec. 41.22 Required certifications.

It shall be unlawful for a designated contract market to list for

trading or execution a security futures product unless the designated

contract market has provided the Commission with a certification that

the specific security futures product or products and the designated

contract market meet, as applicable, the following criteria:

* * * * *

(e) If the board of trade is a designated contract market pursuant

to section 5 of the Act, dual trading in these security futures

products is restricted in accordance with Sec. 41.27;

* * * * *

0

83. Revise paragraph (a) introductory text, paragraph (a)(5), and

paragraph (b) of Sec. 41.23 to read as follows:

Sec. 41.23 Listing of security futures products for trading.

(a) Initial listing of products for trading. To list new security

futures products for trading, a designated contract market shall submit

to the Commission at its Washington, DC headquarters, either in

electronic or hard-copy form, to be received by the Commission no later

than the day prior to the initiation of trading, a filing that:

* * * * *

(5) If the board of trade is a designated contract market pursuant

to section 5 of the Act, it includes a certification that the security

futures product complies with the Act and rules thereunder; and

* * * * *

(b) Voluntary submission of security futures products for

Commission approval. A designated contract market may request that the

Commission approve any security futures product under the procedures of

Sec. 40.5 of this chapter, provided however, that the registered

entity shall include the certification required by Sec. 41.22 with its

submission under Sec. 40.5 of this chapter. Notice designated contract

markets may not request Commission approval of security futures

products.

0

84. Amend Sec. 41.24 by removing paragraph (b), redesignating

paragraph

[[Page 66345]]

(c) as paragraph (b), and revising redesignated paragraph (b), to read

as follows:

Sec. 41.24 Rule amendments to security futures products.

* * * * *

(b) Voluntary submission of rules for Commission review and

approval. A designated contract market or a registered derivatives

clearing organization clearing security futures products may request

that the Commission approve any rule or proposed rule or rule amendment

relating to a security futures product under the procedures of Sec.

40.5 of this chapter, provided however, that the registered entity

shall include the certifications required by Sec. 41.22 with its

submission under Sec. 40.5 of this chapter. Notice designated contract

markets may not request Commission approval of rules.

0

85. Revise paragraphs (a)(1), (a)(2) introductory text, (a)(3)

introductory text, (a)(3)(i)(A), (a)(3)(i)(B), (a)(3)(iv), and (d) of

Sec. 41.25 to read as follows:

Sec. 41.25 Additional conditions for trading for security futures

products.

(a) Common provisions--(1) Reporting of data. The designated

contract market shall comply with part 16 of this chapter requiring the

daily reporting of market data.

(2) Regulatory trading halts. The rules of a designated contract

market that lists or trades one or more security futures products must

include the following provisions:

* * * * *

(3) Speculative position limits. The designated contract market

shall have rules in place establishing position limits or position

accountability procedures for the expiring futures contract month. The

designated contract market shall:

(i) * * *

(A) For security futures products where the average daily trading

volume in the underlying security exceeds 20 million shares, or exceeds

15 million shares and there are more than 40 million shares of the

underlying security outstanding, the designated contract market may

adopt a net position limit no greater than 22,500 (100-share) contracts

applicable to positions held during the last five trading days of an

expiring contract month; or

(B) For security futures products where the average daily trading

volume in the underlying security exceeds 20 million shares and there

are more than 40 million shares of the underlying security outstanding,

the designated contract market may adopt a position accountability

rule. Upon request by the designated contract market, traders who hold

net positions greater than 22,500 (100-share) contracts, or such lower

level specified by exchange rules, must provide information to the

exchange and consent to halt increasing their positions when so ordered

by the exchange.

* * * * *

(iv) For purposes of this section, average daily trading volume

shall be calculated monthly, using data for the most recent six-month

period. If the data justify a higher or lower speculative limit for a

security future, the designated contract market may raise or lower the

position limit for that security future effective no earlier than the

day after it has provided notification to the Commission and to the

public under the submission requirements of Sec. 41.24. If the data

require imposition of a reduced position limit for a security future,

the designated contract market may permit any trader holding a position

in compliance with the previous position limit, but in excess of the

reduced limit, to maintain such position through the expiration of the

security futures contract; provided, that the designated contract

market does not find that the position poses a threat to the orderly

expiration of such contract.

* * * * *

(d) The Commission may exempt a designated contract market from the

provisions of paragraphs (a)(2) and (b) of this section, either

unconditionally or on specified terms and conditions, if the Commission

determines that such exemption is consistent with the public interest

and the protection of customers. An exemption granted pursuant to this

paragraph shall not operate as an exemption from any Securities and

Exchange Commission rules. Any exemption that may be required from such

rules must be obtained separately from the Securities and Exchange

Commission.

0

86. Amend Sec. 41.27 by:

0

a. Revising paragraphs (a)(1), (a)(3) introductory text, (a)(4)(v),

(a)(5), (b), (d) introductory text, (d)(1), (d)(4), and (f); and

0

b. Removing and reserving paragraphs (c)(2) and (e)(2), to read as

follows:

Sec. 41.27 Prohibition of dual trading in security futures products

by floor brokers.

(a) * * *

(1) Trading session means hours during which a designated contract

market is scheduled to trade continuously during a trading day, as set

forth in its rules, including any related post settlement trading

session. A designated contract market may have more than one trading

session during a trading day.

* * * * *

(3) Broker association includes two or more designated contract

market members with floor trading privileges of whom at least one is

acting as a floor broker who:

* * * * *

(4) * * *

(v) An account for another member present on the floor of a

designated contract market or an account controlled by such other

member.

(5) Dual trading means the execution of customer orders by a floor

broker through open outcry during the same trading session in which the

floor broker executes directly or by initiating and passing to another

member, either through open outcry or through a trading system that

electronically matches bids and offers pursuant to a predetermined

algorithm, a transaction for the same security futures product on the

same designated contract market for an account described in paragraphs

(a)(4)(i) through (v) of this section.

(b) Dual Trading Prohibition. (1) No floor broker shall engage in

dual trading in a security futures product on a designated contract

market, except as otherwise provided under paragraphs (d), (e), and (f)

of this section.

(2) A designated contract market operating an electronic market or

electronic trading system that provides market participants with a time

or place advantage or the ability to override a predetermined algorithm

must submit an appropriate rule proposal to the Commission consistent

with the procedures set forth in Sec. 40.5. The proposed rule must

prohibit electronic market participants with a time or place advantage

or the ability to override a predetermined algorithm from trading a

security futures product for accounts in which these same participants

have any interest during the same trading session that they also trade

the same security futures product for other accounts. This paragraph,

however, is not applicable with respect to execution priorities or

quantity guarantees granted to market makers who perform that function,

or to market participants who receive execution priorities based on

price improvement activity, in accordance with the rules governing the

designated contract market.

(c) * * *

(2) [Reserved]

(d) Specific Permitted Exceptions. Notwithstanding the

applicability of a dual trading prohibition under

[[Page 66346]]

paragraph (b) of this section, dual trading may be permitted on a

designated contract market pursuant to one or more of the following

specific exceptions:

(1) Correction of errors. To offset trading errors resulting from

the execution of customer orders, provided, that the floor broker must

liquidate the position in his or her personal error account resulting

from that error through open outcry or through a trading system that

electronically matches bids and offers as soon as practicable, but,

except as provided herein, not later than the close of business on the

business day following the discovery of error. In the event that a

floor broker is unable to offset the error trade because the daily

price fluctuation limit is reached, a trading halt is imposed by the

designated contract market, or an emergency is declared pursuant to the

rules of the designated contract market, the floor broker must

liquidate the position in his or her personal error account resulting

from that error as soon as practicable thereafter.

* * * * *

(4) Market emergencies. To address emergency market conditions

resulting in a temporary emergency action as determined by a designated

contract market.

(e) * * *

(2) [Reserved]

(f) Unique or Special Characteristics of Agreements, Contracts or

Transactions, or of Designated Contract Markets. Notwithstanding the

applicability of a dual trading prohibition under paragraph (b) of this

section, dual trading may be permitted on a designated contract market

to address unique or special characteristics of agreements, contracts,

or transactions, or of the designated contract market as provided

herein. Any rule of a designated contract market that would permit dual

trading when it would otherwise be prohibited, based on a unique or

special characteristic of agreements, contracts, or transactions, or of

the designated contract market must be submitted to the Commission for

prior approval under the procedures set forth in Sec. 40.5. The rule

submission must include a detailed demonstration of why an exception is

warranted.

0

87. Revise paragraphs (a)(4)(i)(B) and (a)(30) of Sec. 41.43 to read

as follows:

Sec. 41.43 Definitions.

(a) * * *

(4) * * *

(i) * * *

(B) If the instrument underlying such security future is a narrow-

based security index, as defined in section 1a(35)(A) of the Act, the

product of the daily settlement price of such security future as shown

by any regularly published reporting or quotation service, and the

applicable contract multiplier.

* * * * *

(30) Self-regulatory authority means a national securities exchange

registered under section 6 of the Exchange Act, a national securities

association registered under section 15A of the Exchange Act, or a

contract market registered under section 5 of the Act or section 5f of

the Act.

* * * * *

0

88. Revise paragraph (b) introductory text of Sec. 41.49 to read as

follows:

Sec. 41.49 Filing proposed margin rule changes with the Commission.

* * * * *

(b) Filing requirements under the Act. Any self-regulatory

authority that is registered with the Commission as a designated

contract market under section 5 of the Act shall, when filing a

proposed rule change regarding customer margin for security futures

with the SEC for approval in accordance with section 19(b)(2) of the

Exchange Act, submit such proposed rule change to the Commission as

follows:

* * * * *

PART 140--ORGANIZATION, FUNCTIONS, AND PROCEDURES OF THE COMMISSION

0

89. The authority citation for part 140 continues to read as follows:

Authority: 7 U.S.C. 2 and 12a.

0

90. Amend Sec. 140.72 by revising the section heading and paragraphs

(a), (b), (d) and (f), to read as follows:

Sec. 140.72 Delegation of authority to disclose confidential

information to a contract market, swap execution facility, swap data

repository, registered futures association or self-regulatory

organization.

(a) Pursuant to the authority granted under sections 2(a)(11),

8a(5) and 8a(6) of the Act, the Commission hereby delegates, until such

time as the Commission orders otherwise, to the Executive Director, the

Deputy Executive Director, the Special Assistant to the Executive

Director, the Director of the Division of Clearing and Intermediary

Oversight, each Deputy Director of the Division of Clearing and

Intermediary Oversight, the Chief Accountant, the General Counsel, each

Deputy General Counsel, the Director of the Division of Market

Oversight, each Deputy Director of the Division of Market Oversight,

the Deputy Director of the Market and Trade Practice Surveillance

Branch, the Director of the Division of Enforcement, each Deputy

Director of the Division of Enforcement, each Associate Director of the

Division of Enforcement, the Chief Counsel of the Division of

Enforcement, each Regional Counsel of the Division of Enforcement, each

of the Regional Administrators, the Chief Economist of the Office of

the Chief Economist, the Deputy Chief Economist of the Office of the

Chief Economist, the Director of the Office of International Affairs,

and the Deputy Director of the Office of International Affairs, the

authority to disclose to an official of any contract market, swap

execution facility, swap data repository, registered futures

association, or self-regulatory organization as defined in section

3(a)(26) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, any information

necessary or appropriate to effectuate the purposes of the Act,

including, but not limited to, the full facts concerning any

transaction or market operation, including the names of the parties

thereto. This authority to disclose shall be based on a determination

that the transaction or market operation disrupts or tends to disrupt

any market or is otherwise harmful or against the best interests of

producers, consumers, or investors or that disclosure is necessary or

appropriate to effectuate the purposes of the Act. The authority to

make such a determination is also delegated by the Commission to the

Commission employees identified in this section. A Commission employee

delegated authority under this section may exercise that authority on

his or her own initiative or in response to a request by an official of

a contract market, swap execution facility, swap data repository,

registered futures association or self-regulatory organization.

(b) Disclosure under this section shall only be made to a contract

market, swap execution facility, swap data repository, registered

futures association or self-regulatory organization official who is

named in a list filed with the Commission by the chief executive

officer of the contract market, swap execution facility, swap data

repository, registered futures association or self-regulatory

organization, which sets forth the official's name, business address

and telephone number. The chief executive officer shall thereafter

notify the Commission of any deletions or additions to the list of

officials authorized to receive disclosures under this section. The

original list and any supplemental list required by this paragraph

shall be filed with the Secretary of the Commission, and a

[[Page 66347]]

copy thereof shall also be filed with the Regional Coordinator for the

region in which the contract market, swap execution facility, or swap

data repository is located or in which the registered futures

association or self-regulatory organization has its principal office.

* * * * *

(d) For purposes of this section, the term ``official'' shall mean

any officer or member of a committee of a contract market, swap

execution facility, swap data repository, registered futures

association or self-regulatory organization who is specifically charged

with market surveillance or audit or investigative responsibilities, or

their duly authorized representative or agent, who is named on the list

filed pursuant to paragraph (b) of this section or any supplement

thereto.

* * * * *

(f) Any contract market, swap execution facility, swap data

repository, registered futures association or self-regulatory

organization receiving information from the Commission under these

provisions shall not disclose such information except that disclosure

may be made in any self-regulatory action or proceeding.

0

91. Amend Sec. 140.77 by revising the section heading and paragraph

(a) to read as follows:

Sec. 140.77 Delegation of authority to determine that applications

for contract market designation, swap execution facility registration,

or swap data repository registration are materially incomplete.

(a) The Commodity Futures Trading Commission hereby delegates,

until such time as the Commission orders otherwise, to the Director of

the Division of Market Oversight or the Director's designees, the

authority to determine that an application for contract market

designation, swap execution facility registration, or swap data

repository registration is materially incomplete under section 6 of the

Commodity Exchange Act and to so notify the applicant.

* * * * *

0

92. Revise paragraphs (a) and (b) of Sec. 140.96 to read as follows:

Sec. 140.96 Delegation of authority to publish in the Federal

Register.

(a) The Commodity Futures Trading Commission hereby delegates,

until such time as the Commission orders otherwise, to the Director of

the Division of Market Oversight or the Director's designee, with the

concurrence of the General Counsel or the General Counsel's designee,

the authority to publish in the Federal Register notice of the

availability for comment of the proposed terms and conditions of

applications for contract market designation, swap execution facility

and swap data repository registration, and to determine to publish, and

to publish, requests for public comment on proposed exchange, swap

execution facility, or swap data repository rules, and rule amendments,

when there exists novel or complex issues that require additional time

to analyze, an inadequate explanation by the submitting registered

entity, or a potential inconsistency with the Act, including

regulations under the Act.

(b) The Commodity Futures Trading Commission hereby delegates,

until such time as the Commission orders otherwise, to the Director of

the Division of Market Oversight or the Director's designee, and to the

Director of the Division of Clearing and Intermediary Oversight or the

Director's designee, with the concurrence of the General Counsel or the

General Counsel's designee, the authority to determine to publish, and

to publish, in the Federal Register, requests for public comment on

proposed exchange and self-regulatory organization rule amendments when

publication of the proposed rule amendment is in the public interest

and will assist the Commission in considering the views of interested

persons.

* * * * *

0

93. Revise paragraph (d)(2) of Sec. 140.99 to read as follows:

Sec. 140.99 Requests for exemptive, no-action and interpretative

letters.

* * * * *

(d) * * *

(2) A request for a Letter relating to the provisions of the Act or

the Commission's rules, regulations or orders governing designated

contract markets, registered swap execution facilities, registered swap

data repositories, exempt commercial markets, exempt boards of trade,

the nature of particular transactions and whether they are exempt or

excluded from being required to be traded on one of the foregoing

entities, foreign trading terminals, hedging exemptions, and the

reporting of market positions shall be filed with the Director,

Division of Market Oversight, Commodity Futures Trading Commission,

Three Lafayette Centre, 1155 21st Street NW., Washington, DC 20581. A

request for a Letter relating to all other provisions of the Act or

Commission rules shall be filed with the Director, Division of Clearing

and Intermediary Oversight, Commodity Futures Trading Commission, Three

Lafayette Centre, 1155 21st Street NW., Washington, DC 20581. The

request must be submitted electronically using the email address

[email protected] (for requests filed with the Division of Market

Oversight), or [email protected] (for requests filed with the

Division of Clearing and Intermediary Oversight), as appropriate, and a

properly signed paper copy of the request must be provided to the

Division of Market Oversight or the Division of Clearing and

Intermediary Oversight, as appropriate, within ten days for purposes of

verification of the electronic submission.

* * * * *

0

94. Amend Sec. 140.735-2 by:

0

a. Redesignating paragraphs (b)(1)(i), (b)(1)(ii), and (b)(1)(iii) as

(b)(1)(ii), (b)(1)(iv), and (b)(1)(v), respectively;

0

b. Adding paragraphs (b)(1)(i) and (b)(1)(iii); and

0

c. Revising paragraphs (b)(2) and (c), to read as follows:

Sec. 140.735-2 Prohibited transactions.

* * * * *

(b) * * *

(1) * * *

(i) In swaps;

* * * * *

(iii) In retail forex transactions, as that term is defined in

Sec. 5.1(m) of this chapter;

* * * * *

(2) Effect any purchase or sale of a commodity option, futures

contract, or swap involving a security or group of securities;

* * * * *

(c) Exception for farming, ranching, and natural resource

operations. The prohibitions in paragraphs (b)(1)(i), (ii), and (iv) of

this section shall not apply to a transaction in connection with any

farming, ranching, oil and gas, mineral rights, or other natural

resource operation in which the member or employee has a financial

interest, if he or she is not involved in the decision to engage in,

and does not have prior knowledge of, the actual futures, commodity

option, or swap transaction and has previously notified the General

Counsel \2\ in writing of the nature of the operation, the extent of

the member's or employee's interest, the types of transactions in which

the operation may engage, and the identity of the person or

[[Page 66348]]

persons who will make trading decisions for the operation; \3\ or

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

\2\ As used in this subpart, ``General Counsel'' refers to the

General Counsel in his or her capacity as counselor for the

Commission and designated agency ethics official for the Commission,

and includes his or her designee and the alternate designated agency

ethics official appointed by the agency head pursuant to 5 CFR

2638.202.

\3\ Although not required, if they choose to do so, members or

employees may use powers of attorney or other arrangements in order

to meet the notice requirements of, and to assure that they have no

control or knowledge of, futures, commodity option, or swap

transactions permitted under paragraph (c) of this section. A member

or employee considering such arrangements should consult with the

Office of General Counsel in advance for approval. Should a member

or employee gain knowledge of an actual futures, commodity option,

or swap transaction entered into by an operation described in

paragraph (c) of this section that has already taken place and the

market position represented by that transaction remains open, he or

she should promptly report that fact and all other details to the

General Counsel and seek advice as to what action, including recusal

from any particular matter that will have a direct and predictable

effect on the financial interest in question, may be appropriate.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

* * * * *

0

95. Revise paragraph (b)(1) of Sec. 140.735-2a to read as follows:

Sec. 140.735-2a Prohibited interests.

* * * * *

(b) * * *

(1) Have a financial interest, through ownership of securities or

otherwise, in any person \5\ registered with the Commission (including

futures commission merchants, associated persons and agents of futures

commission merchants, floor brokers, commodity trading advisors and

commodity pool operators, and any other persons required to be

registered in a fashion similar to any of the above under the Commodity

Exchange Act or pursuant to any rule or regulation promulgated by the

Commission), or any contract market, swap execution facility, swap data

repository, board of trade, or other trading facility, or any

derivatives clearing organization subject to regulation or oversight by

the Commission; \6\

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

\5\ As defined in section 1a(38) of the Commodity Exchange Act

and 17 CFR 1.3(u) thereunder, a ``person'' includes an individual,

association, partnership, corporation and a trust.

\6\ Attention is directed to 18 U.S.C. 208.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

* * * * *

0

96. Revise Sec. 140.735-3 to read as follows:

Sec. 140.735-3 Non-governmental employment and other outside

activity.

A Commission member or employee shall not accept employment or

compensation from any person, exchange, swap execution facility, swap

data repository or derivatives clearing organization subject to

regulation by the Commission. For purposes of this section, a person

subject to regulation by the Commission includes but is not limited to

a contract market, swap execution facility, swap data repository or

derivatives clearing organization or member thereof, a registered

futures commission merchant, any person associated with a futures

commission merchant or with any agent of a futures commission merchant,

floor broker, commodity trading advisor, commodity pool operator or any

person required to be registered in a fashion similar to any of the

above or file reports under the Act or pursuant to any rule or

regulation promulgated by the Commission.\11\

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

\11\ Attention is directed to section 2(a)(8) of the Commodity

Exchange Act, which provides, among other things, that no Commission

member or employee shall accept employment or compensation from any

person, exchange or derivatives clearing organization

(``clearinghouse'') subject to regulation by the Commission, or

participate, directly or indirectly, in any contract market

operations or transactions of a character subject to regulation by

the Commission.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

PART 145--COMMISSION RECORDS AND INFORMATION

0

97. The authority citation for part 145 continues to read as follows:

Authority: Pub. L. 99-570, 100 Stat. 3207; Pub. L. 89-554, 80

Stat. 383; Pub. L. 90-23, 81 Stat. 54; Pub. L. 98-502, 88 Stat.

1561-1564 (5 U.S.C. 552); Sec. 101(a), Pub. L. 93-463, 88 Stat. 1389

(5 U.S.C. 4a(j)); unless otherwise noted.

0

98. Revise paragraphs (c)(1), (d)(1) introductory text, and (d)(1)(vi)

of Sec. 145.9 to read as follows:

Sec. 145.9 Petition for confidential treatment of information

submitted to the Commission.

* * * * *

(c) * * *

(1) Submitter. A ``submitter'' is any person who submits any

information or material to the Commission or who permits any

information or material to be submitted to the Commission. For purposes

of paragraph (d)(1)(ii) of this section only, ``submitter'' includes

any person whose information has been submitted to a designated

contract market, derivatives clearing organization, swap execution

facility, swap data repository or registered futures association that

in turn has submitted the information to the Commission.

* * * * *

(d) Written request for confidential treatment. (1) Any submitter

may request in writing that the Commission afford confidential

treatment under the Freedom of Information Act to any information that

he or she submits to the Commission. Except as provided in paragraph

(d)(4) of this section, no oral requests for confidential treatment

will be accepted by the Commission. The submitter shall specify the

grounds on which confidential treatment is being requested but need not

provide a detailed written justification of the request unless required

to do so under paragraph (e) of this section. Confidential treatment

may be requested only on the grounds that disclosure:

* * * * *

(vi) Would reveal investigatory records compiled for law

enforcement purposes when disclosure would interfere with enforcement

proceedings or disclose investigative techniques and procedures,

provided, that the claim may be made only by a designated contract

market, derivatives clearing organization, swap execution facility,

swap data repository or registered futures association with regard to

its own investigatory records.

* * * * *

0

99. Revise paragraphs (a)(6), (a)(8), and (b)(13) of Appendix A to part

145 to read as follows:

Appendix A to Part 145--Compilation of Commission Records Available to

the Public

* * * * *

(a) * * *

(6) Rule enforcement and financial reviews (public version).

* * * * *

(8) Commission rules and regulations, Federal Register notices,

interpretative letters.

* * * * *

(b) * * *

(13) Publicly available portions of applications to become a

registered entity including the transmittal letter, first page of

the application cover sheet, proposed rules, proposed bylaws,

corporate documents, any overview or similar summary provided by the

applicant, any documents pertaining to the applicant's legal status

and governance structure, including governance fitness information,

and any other part of the application not covered by a request for

confidential treatment.

* * * * *

PART 155--TRADING STANDARDS

0

100. The authority citation for part 155 continues to read as follows:

Authority: 7 U.S.C. 6b, 6c, 6g, 6j, and 12a, unless otherwise

noted.

0

101. Revise the introductory text of Sec. 155.2 to read as follows:

Sec. 155.2 Trading standards for floor brokers.

Each contract market shall adopt rules which shall, at a minimum,

with respect to each member of the contract market acting as a floor

broker:

* * * * *

[[Page 66349]]

0

102. Revise paragraphs (a)(1), (b)(2)(ii), and (c)(1) of Sec. 155.3 to

read as follows:

Sec. 155.3 Trading standards for futures commission merchants.

(a) * * *

(1) Insure, to the extent possible, that each order received from a

customer which is executable at or near the market price is transmitted

to the floor of the appropriate contract market before any order in any

future or in any commodity option in the same commodity for any

proprietary account, any other account in which an affiliated person

has an interest, or any account for which an affiliated person may

originate orders without the prior specific consent of the account

owner, if the affiliated person has gained knowledge of the customer's

order prior to the transmission to the floor of the appropriate

contract market of the order for a proprietary account, an account in

which the affiliated person has an interest, or an account in which the

affiliated person may originate orders without the prior specific

consent of the account owner; and

* * * * *

(b) * * *

(2) * * *

(ii) In the case of a customer who does not qualify as an

``institutional customer'' as defined in Sec. 1.3(g) of this chapter,

a futures commission merchant must obtain the customer's prior consent

through a signed acknowledgment, which may be accomplished in

accordance with Sec. 1.55(d) of this chapter.

(c) * * *

(1) Receives written authorization from a person designated by such

other futures commission merchant or introducing broker with

responsibility for the surveillance over such account pursuant to

paragraph (a)(2) of this section or Sec. 155.4(a)(2), respectively;

* * * * *

0

103. Revise paragraphs (a)(1), (b)(2)(ii), and (c)(2) of Sec. 155.4 to

read as follows:

Sec. 155.4 Trading standards for introducing brokers.

(a) * * *

(1) Insure, to the extent possible, that each order received from a

customer which is executable at or near the market price is transmitted

to the futures commission merchant carrying the account of the customer

before any order in any future or in any commodity option in the same

commodity for any proprietary account, any other account in which an

affiliated person has an interest, or any account for which an

affiliated person may originate orders without the prior specific

consent of the account owner, if the affiliated person has gained

knowledge of the customer's order prior to the transmission to the

floor of the appropriate contract market of the order for a proprietary

account, an account in which the affiliated person has an interest, or

an account in which the affiliated person may originate orders without

the prior specific consent of the account owner; and

* * * * *

(b) * * *

(2) * * *

(ii) In the case of a customer who does not qualify as an

``institutional customer'' as defined in Sec. 1.3(g) of this chapter,

an introducing broker must obtain the customer's prior consent through

a signed acknowledgment, which may be accomplished in accordance with

Sec. 1.55(d) of this chapter.

* * * * *

(c) * * *

(2) Copies of all statements for such account and of all written

records prepared by such futures commission merchant upon receipt of

orders for such account pursuant to Sec. 155.3(c)(2) are transmitted

on a regular basis to the introducing broker with which such person is

affiliated.

Sec. 155.6 [Removed and Reserved]

0

104. Remove and reserve Sec. 155.6.

PART 166--CUSTOMER PROTECTION RULES

0

105. The authority citation for part 155 continues to read as follows:

Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1a, 2, 6b, 6c, 6d, 6g, 6h, 6k, 6l, 6o, 7,

12a, 21, and 23, as amended by Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Wall

Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, Pub. L. 111-203, 124

Stat. 1376 (2010).

0

106. Revise paragraph (a) introductory text and paragraph (b) of Sec.

166.2 to read as follows:

Sec. 166.2 Authorization to trade.

* * * * *

(a) With respect to a commodity interest as defined in any

paragraph of the commodity interest definition in Sec. 1.3(yy) of this

chapter, specifically authorized the futures commission merchant,

retail foreign exchange dealer, introducing broker or any of their

associated persons to effect the transaction (a transaction is

``specifically authorized'' if the customer or person designated by the

customer to control the account specifies--

* * * * *

(b) With respect to a commodity interest as defined in paragraph

(1) or (2) of the commodity interest definition in Sec. 1.3(yy) of

this chapter, authorized in writing the futures commission merchant,

introducing broker or any of their associated persons to effect

transactions in commodity interests for the account without the

customer's specific authorization; Provided, however, That if any such

futures commission merchant, introducing broker or any of their

associated persons is also authorized to effect transactions in foreign

futures or foreign options without the customer's specific

authorization, such authorization must be expressly documented.

0

107. Revise paragraph (a)(2) of Sec. 166.5 to read as follows:

Sec. 166.5 Dispute settlement procedures.

(a) * * *

(2) The term customer as used in this section includes any person

for or on behalf of whom a member of a designated contract market, or a

participant transacting on or through such designated contract market,

effects a transaction on such contract market, except another member of

or participant in such designated contract market. Provided, however, a

person who is an ``eligible contract participant'' as defined in

section 1a(18) of the Act shall not be deemed to be a customer within

the meaning of this section.

* * * * *

Issued in Washington, DC on October 16, 2012, by the Commission.

Sauntia S. Warfield,

Assistant Secretary of the Commission.

Appendices to Adaptation of Regulations To Incorporate Swaps--

Commission Voting Summary and Statements of Commissioners

Note: The following appendices will not appear in the Code of

Federal Regulations.

Appendix 1--Commission Voting Summary

On this matter, Chairman Gensler and Commissioners Sommers,

Chilton, O'Malia and Wetjen voted in the affirmative; no

Commissioner voted in the negative.

Appendix 2--Statement of Chairman Gary Gensler

I support the final rule to amend and conform certain provisions

of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission's (CFTC) regulations to

incorporate swaps. These final conforming amendments are crucial to

integrating the CFTC's regulations with the Dodd-Frank Wall Street

Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank Act), which expanded

the scope of the Commodity Exchange Act to cover swaps.

[[Page 66350]]

Specifically, this final rule updates the CFTC's definitions of

futures commission merchant (FCM) and introducing broker (IB) to

fulfill the Dodd-Frank Act's requirement to permit these entities to

trade swaps on behalf of their customers. This final rule also

updates the definitions of commodity interest, customer, and

customer funds to incorporate swaps. In addition, the final rule

adds swap execution facilities (SEFs) to the list of CFTC-regulated

trading venues.

The final rule amends existing recordkeeping requirements for

FCMs and IBs to ensure that similar records are kept for swaps as

are currently kept for futures. In addition, SEF members will be

obligated to comply with the same recordkeeping duties as are

required of designated contract market (DCM) members.

[FR Doc. 2012-25764 Filed 11-1-12; 8:45 am]

BILLING CODE 6351-01-P

Last Updated: November 2, 2012