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Showing posts with label CFTC CHAIRMAN GENSLER. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CFTC CHAIRMAN GENSLER. Show all posts

Friday, January 3, 2014

CFTC & FERC SIGN MEMORANDUM OF UNDERSTANDING REGARDING INVESTIGATIONS AND SURVEILLANCE

FROM:  COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION 

January 2, 2014

FERC, CFTC Sign MOUs on Jurisdiction and Information Sharing

Washington, DC — The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) have signed two Memoranda of Understanding (MOU) to address circumstances of overlapping jurisdiction and to share information in connection with market surveillance and investigations into potential market manipulation, fraud or abuse. The MOUs allow the agencies to promote effective and efficient regulation to protect energy market competitors and consumers.

The jurisdiction MOU sets out a process under which the agencies will notify each other of activities that may involve overlapping jurisdiction and coordinate to address the agencies’ regulatory concerns. The new information sharing MOU establishes procedures through which the agencies will share information of mutual interest related to their respective market surveillance and investigative responsibilities, while maintaining confidentiality and data protection. In support of the new information sharing MOU, CFTC Chairman Gary Gensler and FERC Acting Chairman Cheryl LaFleur also agreed that the agencies will work together to share appropriate data relating to financial markets for gas and electricity on an ongoing basis.

“These memoranda will further strengthen FERC’s ability to perform its market oversight and enforcement responsibilities,” said Acting Chairman LaFleur. “As FERC’s role in overseeing the competitive energy markets has grown since the passage of the Energy Policy Act of 2005, our need to coordinate with the CFTC is increasingly important. I appreciate Chairman Gensler’s work on these agreements and look forward to continued cooperation between our agencies.”

“I’m so pleased that with Acting Chairman LaFleur, our two agencies have been able to enter into these Memoranda of Understanding,” said CFTC Chairman Gensler. “These memoranda will help lead to better protection of the nation’s energy markets and increase cooperation between the agencies.”

Congress directed the CFTC and FERC to develop the MOUs as part of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act. The agencies have been operating under a 2005 MOU that allowed information exchange related to oversight or investigations.

Sunday, December 15, 2013

CFTC CHAIRMAN GENSLER MAKES REMARKS ON " A TRANSFORMED MARKETPLACE"

FROM: COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION 
Remarks of Chairman Gary Gensler at a D.C. Bar Event - "A Transformed Marketplace"

December 11, 2013

Thank you, Alice and Peter, for your kind introductions. I also want to thank the DC Bar for inviting me here to speak today.

Five years ago, when President-elect Obama asked me to serve, the U.S. economy was in a free fall.

Five years ago, the financial system and the financial regulatory system failed the American public.

Five years ago, the unregulated swaps market was at the center of the crisis.

Five years ago, when Tim Geithner, Mary Schapiro and I sat down in the presidential transition offices with yellow pads to contemplate our upcoming confirmation hearings, we knew that modernizing the financial system wouldn’t be easy. We knew that ever since our founding, democracy is noisy and messy.

We knew, though, that we had to come together to bring common-sense rules of the road to the markets.

With 94 percent of private sector jobs outside of finance, President Obama was looking for solutions to ensure finance better serves the rest of the economy.

I was honored to be asked to join the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), our nation’s futures market regulator.

The reforms of the 1930s had tasked the CFTC to swim in a very important lane – derivatives. The futures market has allowed farmers, ranchers and producers to lock in the price of a commodity since the 1860s. The derivatives lane, though, got a lot deeper a century later with the emergency of the vast swaps market. Both futures and swaps are essential to our economy and the way that businesses and investors manage risk.

The President placed great confidence in the CFTC when he asked the agency to help bring much-needed transparency and oversight to the dark, closed swaps market.

This confidence in the CFTC was well placed. As we’ve seen time and again in our nation’s history, when faced with real challenges, we Americans from different walks of life and perspectives find a way to come together to solve them.

The talented CFTC staff and my fellow Commissioners – Mike Dunn, Jill Sommers, Bart Chilton, Scott O’Malia and Mark Wetjen – really have delivered for the American public.

The CFTC has finalized 68 rules, orders and guidances. We have completed nearly all of the agency’s rulemakings, and the initial major compliance dates are behind us.

These reforms took into account nearly 60,000 public comments and input from more than 2,200 meetings and 21 public roundtables.

During this process, the Commission largely found consensus. In fact, two-thirds of our final actions have been unanimous, and nearly 85 percent have been bipartisan. Even when we disagreed, I believe that we did so agreeably.

Now, bright lights of transparency are shining on the $380 trillion swaps market.

Now, a majority of the swaps market is being centrally cleared – lowering risk and bringing access to anyone wishing to compete.

Now, 91 swap dealers have registered and – for the first time – are being overseen for their swaps activity.

Five years after the financial crisis, the swaps marketplace truly has been transformed.

Transparency

Foremost, the swaps marketplace has been transformed with transparency.

First, the public can see the price and volume of each swap transaction as it occurs.

This information is available, free of charge, to everyone in the public. The data is listed in real time – like a modern-day tickertape – on the websites of the three swap data repositories (SDRs).

Second, building on the CFTC’s long tradition of promoting transparency, we recently began publishing a Weekly Swaps Report to provide the public with a detailed view of the swaps marketplace.

Third, regulators also have gained transparency into the details on each of the 1.8 million transactions and positions in the SDRs.

Fourth, starting this fall, the public – for the first time –is benefitting from new transparency, impartial access and competition on regulated swap trading platforms.

We now have 19 temporarily registered swap execution facilities where more than a quarter of a trillion dollars in swaps trading is occurring on average per day.

This pre-trade transparency lowers costs for investors, businesses and consumers, as it shifts information from dealers to the broader public.

Fifth, I anticipate that by mid-February, the congressionally mandated trade execution requirement will become effective for a significant portion of the interest rate and credit index swap markets.

Clearing

The swaps market also has been transformed with mandated central clearing for financial entities as well as dealers.

Central clearing lowers risk and fosters competition by allowing customers ready access to the market.

Clearinghouses have operated successfully at the center of the futures market for over 100 years – through two world wars, the Great Depression and the 2008 crisis.

Reforms have taken us from only 21 percent of the interest rate swaps market being cleared five years ago to more than 70 percent of the market this fall. More than 60 percent of new credit index swaps are being cleared.

Further, we no longer have the significant time delays that were once associated with swaps clearing.

Five years ago, swaps clearing happened either at the end of the day or even just once a week. This left a significant period of bilateral credit risk in the market, undermining a key benefit of central clearing.

Now reforms require pre-trade credit checks and straight-through processing for swaps trades intended for clearing.

With 99 percent of swaps clearing occurring within 10 seconds, market participants no longer have to worry about credit risk when entering into swap trades intended to be cleared.

Swap Dealers

The market also has been transformed for swap dealers.

Five years ago, swap dealers had no specific requirements with regard to their swap dealing activity. AIG’s downfall was a clear example of what happens with no registration or licensing requirement for such dealers.

Today, all of the world’s largest financial institutions in the global swaps market are coming under reforms.

These reforms include new business conduct standards for risk management, documentation of swap transactions, confirmations, sales practices, recordkeeping and reporting.

With the approval of the Volcker Rule yesterday, swap dealers associated with banking entities will have to comply with new risk-reducing requirements prohibiting proprietary trading.

Further, the transformed marketplace covers the far-flung operations of U.S. enterprises, including their offshore branches and guaranteed affiliates.

The President and Congress were clear in financial reform that we had to learn the lessons of the 2008 financial crisis.

AIG nearly brought down the U.S. economy through its guaranteed affiliate operating under a French bank license in London.

Lehman Brothers had 3,300 legal entities when it failed. Its main overseas affiliate was guaranteed here in the United States, and it had 130,000 outstanding swap transactions.

The lessons of modern finance are clear. If reform does not cover the far flung operations of U.S. enterprises, trades inevitably would just be booked in offshore branches or affiliates. If reform does not cover these far-flung operations, rather than reforming the financial system, we simply would be providing a significant loophole.

Benchmark Interest Rates

Five years ago, as the public now knows, multiple banks were pervasively rigging the world’s most important benchmark interest rates.

The public trust has been violated through bad actors readily manipulating these benchmark interest rates.

I wish I could say that this won’t happen again, but I can’t.

As LIBOR and Euribor are not anchored in observable transactions, they are more akin to fiction than fact.

That’s the fundamental challenge that the CFTC and law enforcement agencies around the globe have so dramatically revealed.

We’ve made progress addressing governance and conflicts of interest regarding such benchmarks. But this alone will not resolve the fundamental vulnerability of these benchmarks – the lack of transactions in the interbank market underlying them.

That is why the work of the Financial Stability Board to find replacements for LIBOR and to recommend a means to transition to such alternatives is so critical. The CFTC looks forward to continuing work with the international community on these much-needed reforms.

Customer Protection

Market events in the last five years highlighted the need to further ensure for the protection of customer funds. Segregation and the protection of customer funds is the core foundation of the futures and swaps markets.

The CFTC went through a two-year process with market participants – and six sets of finalized rules – to comprehensively reform the customer protection regime for futures and swaps.

Resources

One of the most remarkable things about the CFTC is that today, it’s only five percent larger than it was 20 years ago.

Since then, though, this small, effective agency has taken on the job of overseeing the $380 trillion swaps market, which is a dozen times the size of the futures market we have historically overseen. Further, the futures market itself has grown fivefold since the 1990s.

Due to the budget challenges in Washington, not only has the CFTC been shrinking, but we had to notify employees of administrative furloughs.

Though the agency has yet to secure necessary funding from Congress, I continue to have faith that one day the CFTC will be funded at levels aligned with its vastly expanded mission.

The Journey Ahead

Though the CFTC has completed nearly all the rules of the road for the swaps market, reform is an ongoing journey.

Just as our nation has come together on financial reform these last five years, our regulations will continuously need to evolve. We always need to be open to changes in the markets and how best to promote transparency, competition and protect the public.

The journey is not over in transitioning to a replacement for LIBOR or in adequately funding the CFTC.

Further, as Tim, Mary and I understood five years ago, democracy – and reform – can be noisy and messy.

As market participants look to maximize their revenues and customer support, they, at times, may look to arbitrage our rules versus other rules around the globe.

I think that we’re in very firm setting on clearing, data reporting, real-time reporting, and business conduct reforms -- all of which have been implemented. There are bound to be further challenges, however, from the financial community with regard to the appropriate level of pre-trade transparency on trading platforms, as well as the scope of the cross-border application of reform.

Conclusion

I’d like to close by saying I couldn’t be more proud of the dedicated group of public servants at the CFTC. I am honored to have served along with them during such a remarkable time in the history of the agency.

Our nation benefits from free market capitalism, but it’s critical that we have common-sense rules of road to ensure that finance best serves the public at large.

On a personal note, as this is my last public speech as Chairman of the CFTC, I want to thank both Stephanie Allen and her predecessor Scott Schneider, the speechwriters whose cleverness and agility with words, not to mention the willingness to work with me, has allowed me these last five years to bring transparency to what we’re doing at the CFTC.

I also want to extend my appreciation to all the members of the media who have reported on us and followed us during this remarkable journey these last five years. As always, I’ll do one more press avail after taking questions from the audience.

Thank you.

Sunday, November 10, 2013

CFTC CHAIRMAN GENSLER'S STATEMENT ON AGGREGATION PROVISIONS FOR LIMITS ON SPECULATIVE POSITONS

FROM:  U.S. COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION 
Statement of Support by Chairman Gary Gensler: Aggregation Provisions for Limits on Speculative Positions

November 5, 2013

I support the proposed rule that would modify the CFTC’s aggregation provisions for limits on speculative positions.

As we move forward on position limits for futures and swaps, it is important to concurrently implement reforms to the Commission’s current regulations regarding which positions are totaled up as being owned or controlled by a particular entity. These total, aggregated positions under common control are then subject to the speculative position limits, taking into consideration any relevant exemptions.

We live in a time when companies often have numerous affiliated entities, sometimes measured in the hundreds or thousands. Thus, it is appropriate to look at how speculative position limits apply across the enterprise. When Lehman Brothers failed, it had 3,300 legal entities within its corporate family. The question is – do you count all those 3,300 legal entities that Lehman Brothers once controlled, or do you apply a limit for each and every one of the 3,300? If we chose the second, that would be, in practice, a loophole around congressional intent. That's why this issue of aggregation comes into play.

The proposal generally provides for aggregation when various entities are under common control. For instance, if the ownership interest is greater than 50 percent, it will be presumed to be aggregated and part of the group.

The proposal provides for certain exemptions from aggregation for the following reasons:

Where sharing of information would violate or create reasonable risk of violating a federal, state or foreign jurisdiction law or regulation;
Where an ownership interest is less than 50 percent and trading is independently controlled;
Where an ownership interest is greater than 50 percent in a non-consolidated entity whose trading is independently controlled, and an applicant certifies that such entity’s positions either qualify as bona fide hedging positions or do not exceed 20 percent of any position limit; or
Where ownership of less than 50 percent results from broker-dealer activities in the normal course of business.
Last Updated: November 9, 2013

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

ADDRESS OF CFTC CHAIRMAN GENSLER AT 5TH ANNUAL FINANCIAL REGULATORY REFORM SYMPOSIUM

FROM:  U.S. COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION 
A New Marketplace

Keynote Address of Chairman Gary Gensler at the 5th Annual Financial Regulatory Reform Symposium at George Washington University

October 31, 2013

Thank you, Art, for that kind introduction. I also would like to thank George Washington University for the invitation to speak today.

Five years ago, the U.S. economy was in a free fall.

Five years ago, the swaps market was at the center of the crisis.

Five years ago, middle-class Americans lost their jobs, their pensions and their homes in the worst crisis since the Great Depression.

Five years ago, the swaps market contributed to the financial system failing the real economy. Thousands of businesses closed their doors.

President Obama gathered the G-20 leaders in Pittsburgh in 2009. They committed to bringing the swaps market into the light through transparency and oversight.

The President and Congress in 2010 gave the task of implementing swaps market reform to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and security-based swaps market reform to the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Congress essentially mandated a complete overhaul of the derivatives market – to a New Marketplace.

Now, through the CFTC’s 65 final rules, orders and guidances this New Marketplace is a reality – benefitting investors, consumers and businesses.

Today’s New Marketplace means there are bright lights of transparency shining though this $400 trillion market.

Today’s New Marketplace means there are robust safety measures in place that didn’t exist in 2008.

These reforms are based on time-tested ideas.

Since Adam Smith and the Wealth of Nations, economists have consistently written about how the broad public benefits from the access and competition transparency brings to a market.

As we have since Adam Smith’s days, we prosper from our market-based economy.

But it is only through a standard set of common-sense rules of the road that we lower uncertainty, level the playing field and protect against abuses.

Transparency

Significant new transparency is the foremost change in this New Marketplace.

There has been a real paradigm shift.

Since early this year, the public can see the price and volume of each swap transaction as it occurs. This is across the entire market, regardless of product, counterparty, or whether it’s a standardized or customized transaction.

This information is free of charge and available on the Internet, like a modern-day tickertape.

Also beginning earlier this year, regulators are able to see the details on each of the transactions and positions that are in this $400 trillion swaps marketplace. We’re able to see those details for each of the 1.8 million transactions in the data repositories. We can filter this information and see what individual financial institutions are doing in the marketplace.

This new window into the market is an enormous change since 2008.

Further, starting this month, the public – for the first time – is benefitting from new transparency, access and competition on swap trading platforms.

Once fully phased in, market participants will benefit from seeing competitive prices before they enter into a transaction.

This is because swap execution facilities (SEFs) are required to provide all market participants – dealers and non-dealers alike – with impartial access, once again following Adam Smith’s observations on how to benefit the economy.

Requiring trading platforms to be registered and overseen by regulators was central to the New Marketplace reforms President Obama and Congress included in the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank Act). They expressly repealed exemptions, such as the so-called “Enron Loophole,” for unregistered, multilateral swap trading platforms.

Seventeen SEFs are temporarily registered. This again is truly a paradigm shift – a transition from a dark to a lit market. It’s a transition from a mostly dealer-dominated market to one where others have a greater chance to compete.

Clearing

The second fundamental change of this New Marketplace is central clearing.

Clearinghouses stand between buyers and sellers of derivative contracts, protecting them in case one of them goes bankrupt. Clearinghouses lower risk and promote access for market participants. They have worked since the 1890s in the futures market but were not widely used in the swaps marketplace – until now.

Last week, 80 percent of new interest rate swaps were brought into central clearing. That compares to only 21 percent in 2008. Going from a 21 percent market share to an 80 percent market share in any business would deserve some attention.

Given that clearing was still being phased in over the course of this year, in total over $190 trillion of the approximately $340 trillion market facing interest rate swaps market, or 57 percent, was cleared as of last week.

Swap Dealer Oversight

The third fundamental change of this New Marketplace is that swap dealers are now being regulated for their swaps activity.

Prior to these reforms – though one needs a license to be a stockbroker – the largest, most sophisticated financial dealers in the world weren’t required to have any special license for their swaps dealing activity. AIG’s downfall was a clear example of what happens with no registration or licensing requirement for such dealers.

Congress understood this and mandated that swap dealer registration was a critical part of this New Marketplace. Today, we have 88 swap dealers registered. This group includes the world’s 16 largest financial institutions in the global swaps market, commonly referred to as the G16 dealers. It also includes a number of energy swap dealers.

All of these registered dealers now have to comply with new business conduct standards for risk management, sales practices, recordkeeping and reporting.

International Coordination on Swap Market Reform

In the New Marketplace, the far-flung operations of U.S. enterprises are covered under reform.

Congress was clear in the Dodd-Frank Act that we had to learn the lessons of the 2008 crisis. Money and risk knows no geographic border.

AIG nearly brought down the U.S. economy because it guaranteed the losses of a Mayfair branch operating under a French bank license in London.

Lehman Brothers had 3,300 legal entities, including a London affiliate that was guaranteed here in the United States, and it had 130,000 outstanding swap transactions.

The nature of modern finance is that financial institutions commonly set up hundreds, or even thousands, of legal entities around the globe. When a run starts on any part of an overseas affiliate or branch of a modern financial institution, risk crosses international borders. Any one of the legal entities can take down the entire company.

The CFTC, coordinating closely with global regulators, completed guidance on the cross-border application of the Dodd-Frank Act in July. Swaps market reform covers transactions between non-U.S. swap dealers and guaranteed affiliates of U.S. persons, as well as swaps between two guaranteed affiliates.

The guidance embraces the concept of substituted compliances, or relying on another country’s rules when they are comparable and comprehensive.

Earlier this month, the guaranteed affiliates and branches of U.S. persons were required to come into central clearing. Further, hedge funds and other funds whose principal place of business is in the United States or that are majority owned by U.S. persons are required to clear as well. No longer will a hedge fund with a P.O. Box in the Cayman Islands for its legal address be able to skirt the important reforms Congress put in place.

Benchmark Interest Rates

The CFTC has changed the way the world thinks about benchmark interest rates.

LIBOR and Euribor are critical reference rates for global futures and swaps markets. In the U.S., LIBOR is the reference rate for 70 percent of the futures market and more than half of the swaps market. It is the reference rate for more than $10 trillion in loans.

Unfortunately, through five settlements against banks, we have seen how the public trust can be violated through bad actors readily manipulating benchmark interest rates.

I wish I could say that this won’t happen again, but I can’t.

LIBOR and Euribor are not sufficiently anchored in observable transactions. Thus, they are basically more akin to fiction than fact. That’s the fundamental challenge so sharply revealed by Rabobank this week and our four prior cases.

These five instances of benchmark manipulative conduct highlight the critical need to find replacements for LIBOR and Euribor – replacements truly anchored in observable transactions.

Though addressing governance and conflicts of interest regarding benchmarks is critical, that will not solve the lack of transactions in the market underlying these benchmarks.

That is why the work of the Financial Stability Board to find alternatives and consider potential transitions to these alternatives is so important. The CFTC looks forward to continuing to work with the international community on much-needed reforms.

Resources

The CFTC is basically done with rulewriting, the first significant compliance dates have passed and the New Marketplace is here. We’ve brought the largest and most significant enforcement cases in the Commission’s history.

These successes, however, should not be confused with the agency having sufficient people and technology to oversee these markets.

One of the greatest threats to well-functioning, open, and competitive swaps and futures markets is that the agency tasked with overseeing them is not sized to the task at hand.

At 674 people, we are only slightly larger than we were 20 years ago. Since then though, Congress gave us the job of overseeing the $400 trillion swaps market, which is more than 10 times the size of the futures market we oversaw just four years ago. Further, the futures market itself has grown fivefold since the 1990s.

We need people to examine the clearinghouses, trading platforms, clearing members and dealers.

We need surveillance staff to actually swim in the new data pouring into the data repositories.

We need lawyers and analysts to answer the many hundreds of questions that are coming in from market participants about implementation.

We need sufficient funding to ensure this agency can closely monitor for the protection of customer funds.

And we need more enforcement staff to ensure this vast market actually comes into compliance, and to go after bad actors in the futures and swaps markets.

The President has asked for $315 million for the CFTC. This year we’ve been operating with only $195 million.

Worse yet, as a result of continued funding challenges, sequestration and a required minimum level Congress set for the CFTC’s outside technology spending, the CFTC already has shrunk 5 percent, and just last week, was forced to notify employees that they would be put on administrative furlough for up to 14 days this year.

I recognize that Congress and the President have real challenges with regard to our federal budget. I believe, though, that the CFTC is a good investment for the American public. It’s a good investment to ensure the country has transparent and well-functioning markets.

Conclusion

Thank you again for inviting me to speak today; I’m pleased to say it’s my fifth time speaking at GW. In the past, I’ve spoken about the need for swaps market reform. Today, I’m glad to tell you that the New Marketplace is a reality.

This marketplace also has significant new protections for customer funds, as well as significantly more transparency for asset managers, known as commodity pool operators.

I’ll close with this: swaps market reform also is a key component in ensuring that when the next financial firm fails, that the financial system is not too interconnected, too complex or too in the shadows to prevent the firm from having the freedom to fail.

After World War II, my dad took his $300 mustering-out pay and started what became the family business. He knew that if he didn’t make payroll, nobody was going to bail him out.

If he were alive, he would say it shouldn’t be any different for banks and other large financial institutions. That’s what Congress said, as well, in passing Dodd-Frank financial reform. Companies, large and small, should be free to innovate, to grow, and, yes, to fail without taxpayer support.

Thank you, and I look forward to answering your questions.

Friday, November 1, 2013

CFTC CHAIRMAN GENSLER'S STATEMENT ON CUSTOMER PROTECTION REFORMS IN DERIVATIVES MARKET PLACE

FROM:  U.S. COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION 
Opening Statement of Chairman Gary Gensler: Open Meeting to Consider Customer Protection Reforms
October 30, 2013

Good morning. This meeting will come to order. This is a public meeting of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC). I’d like to welcome members of the public, market participants and members of the media, as well as those listening to the meeting on the phone or watching the webcast.

I would like to thank Commissioners Chilton, O’Malia and Wetjen for their contributions to the rule-writing process and the CFTC’s hardworking and dedicated staff.

This is a public meeting that is partially related to the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act related because it relates to swaps funds. This meeting is about customer funds and customer protections.

Segregation of customer fund is the core foundation of the commodity futures and swaps markets. Segregation must be maintained at all times. That means every moment of every day.

Market events, though, of these last two years highlighted that the Commission must do everything within our authorities and resources to strengthen oversight programs and protection of customer funds.

And today's reforms are the sixth set of rules to be finalized by this Commission, if we move forward to finalize them, during a two-year process to ensure that customers have confidence that their funds are segregated and protected. These reforms benefit from the Commission's thorough review of existing customer protection rules – looking for any gaps in those rules and the oversight of these markets.

They benefit from significant public input, including staff roundtables and the Technology Advisory Committee, Agricultural Advisory Committee meetings, and numerous reports submitted by market participants.

They also benefit from input through a coordinated effort of the CFTC with other regulators; the self-regulatory organizations (SROs), such as the CME and the National Futures Association (NFA); as well as Congressional reports and input on these matters.

I will be supporting today's rules, in summary, for at least for six reasons. They are quite comprehensive, but here are six points I want to highlight:

First, FCMs, clearing members, have to significantly enhance their supervision of and accounting for customer funds. They will have to put in place additional policies and procedures for these new protections.

Second, significant enhancements around outside accounting and auditing – regarding the actual accountants or certified public accountants that audit futures commission merchants (FCMs), and also regarding the SROs and how they audit the FCMs.

Third, significant customer fund protections with regard to how funds are moved around. Basically, when a firm moves money within a firm, how can they move that money around? Some of these reforms were adopted by SROs last year, such as requiring senior management signoff, and the pre-approval of moving those monies. There are also significant new protections coming from changes in the required acknowledgment letters from the banks and custodians.

Fourth, reforms related to investing in international futures accounts. Our Part 30 regime really had not kept pace with protections for domestic futures accounts. With these reforms and the reforms that the NFA had put in place last year, investing in foreign futures accounts will be significantly aligned with the domestic protections. They won't be identical, but they will be significantly aligned with the protections for domestic futures accounts.

Fifth, there's significant new transparency. Transparency to the regulators – we will be able to see electronically custodial accounts and cash accounts on a daily basis. There is transparency to the public, as well, with the twice-a-month statements of the details of their funds in the investment accounts. These reforms also have been put in place by the SROs, but it is important that we do this at the federal level as well, and put it in our rules.

Sixth, the final rules include provisions on capital and residual interest of the FCMs themselves. This was quite possibly the most debated feature of these reforms, but I think they are important. In response to commenters on this provision, we are phasing in compliance to smooth implementation. As the staff will present, this section calls for significant new studies and roundtables and provides for a five-year phase in on these matters.

It is important that we look very closely at the law and ensure that one customer's funds or property are not used in some way to secure or guarantee other people's accounts.
Prior to this final rule set, the Commission had already made important improvements to protections for customers. In a longer statement for the record I go through those. But this is really a remarkable achievement, and I want to thank my fellow Commissioners

I also wanted to address three other matters.

This morning, unanimously as a Commission, we actually finalized two other rule sets. Since they were noticed for this meeting, I just wanted to inform the public about them. The first is one of the five other matters that we did to help customers and protect their funds. It relates to the choice that customers will have to segregate their collateral and funds -- the initial margin standing behind swaps that are not cleared. Congress gave the clear right to counterparties of swap dealers that they can chose to have those funds segregated. I'm pleased to report that we unanimously moved that this morning. It’s a key tenant of customer protection.

Another rule that we moved on was from the Division of Market Oversight, the Office of the Chief Economist and all of our surveillance teams across the agency. It is called ownership and control reporting. This has been on our docket for four-plus years. We had an advanced notice of proposed rulemaking, and then a proposal. We re-proposed it after some staff roundtables.

I'm glad to say we again reached conclusion, and I want to thank Commissioner O'Malia for his doggedness on this. We will finally have in our rulebook that it is required to file these various forms electronically -- no longer by mail and fax. I also want to thank staff.

Many of the things in this document that we are considering today also relate to filing things electronically, which is the right place to be in the 21st century.

The ownership and control reporting will give us a greater window into those parties that actually own accounts and control those accounts -- not only for positions, but also, in the world of high frequency trading, for accounts that have high volume on a particular day, but might end the day flat or without a position.

For the first time, we'll have this enhanced ability to oversee markets.

I also wanted to give a public thanks to my friend, my colleague and a wonderful head of the Division of Enforcement, David Meister. Today is, in fact, his last day of service at the CFTC.

David, you have brought tremendous energy, wisdom, talent, and, yes, expertise from the Southern District of New York. I think you've shown how to be a tough but fair prosecutor, and you've led a remarkable team, often strapped with not enough resources. I wish you well in your next professional adventures.

Note: this transcript was edited for clarity.

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

CFTC CHAIRMAN GENSLER'S REMARKS BEFORE AMERICANS FOR FINANCIAL REFORM

FROM: U.S. COMMODITY FUTURES EXCHANGE COMMISSION 
Keynote Remarks of Chairman Gary Gensler before the Americans for Financial Reform and Georgetown University Law Center’s Financial Transparency Symposium

Note: this transcript was edited and abbreviated for clarity

October 11, 2013

I want to thank the Americans for Financial Reform and Georgetown Law Center for this invitation. We’re in the midst of a government shutdown so I’m going to give a presentation from some notes, not the usual prepared text speech.

Five years ago, the U.S. economy was in free fall.

Five years ago the swaps market was at the center of this crisis. It cost middle class Americans – and hardworking people around the globe – their jobs, their pensions and their homes.

President Obama and Congress came together and they responded with historic reforms to bring the swaps market into the light through transparency and oversight.

And now, with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission’s (CFTC) near completion of these reforms, a true paradigm shift has resulted.

A paradigm shift to a transparent, regulated marketplace that benefits investors, consumers and businesses in this country and around the globe.

The CFTC, through 61 final rules, orders, and guidances, has brought traffic lights, stop signs, and speed limits to this once dark and unregulated market.

Through these reforms, we have stood up an entire comprehensive regime covering:

Transparency and access – which helps promote greater competition and market efficiency;
Clearing – promoting access and lowering risk;
Oversight of intermediaries and customer protection – to better protect the public;
Registration requirements – ensuring there is actual compliance with the reforms; and
New enforcement tools – to guard against market abuses.
These completed reforms have resulted from an active public debate –

First in Congress and the Administration, and then
Subsequently through our public rule making. We have received nearly 40,000 comment letters on these various rules – and that’s not even counting the 19,000 comments on the Volcker Rule. We’ve conducted 2,200 plus meetings that we’ve put on our website.
I thought I would review where we stand today in this critical reform in the context of a dozen debates that have gone on around this reform.

The first three debates relate to the scope of reform.

First, which products should be covered?

Congress and the Administration chose not to limit regulatory reform only to those products or entities that received the most attention during the financial crisis, which were credit derivatives. The comprehensive regulatory framework now covers the full suite of swaps products. This includes interest rate swaps, currency swaps, commodity swaps, equity swaps, credit default swaps – the center of the crisis – as well as derivative products that may be developed in the future.

Credit default swaps may have been the leading culprit in the crisis, but omitting the markets for interest rate, currency swaps and commodity swaps would have left, the market still opaque and inefficient. And we needed to shine the same light and lower risk in all of the OTC derivatives markets, not just credit derivatives.

Now there was some debate about foreign currency forwards and swaps. Though they are exempted from clearing and the trade execution mandate, Congress and the CFTC worked to ensure that they have to be reported into trade repositories, and also that they come under business conduct standards. We’ve worked closely with the foreign currency community, and they have changed their back office documentation as of June of this year.

Second, which participants should be covered through reforms?

Congress and our rules ended up with a three-tiered system of participant reforms: swap dealers at the center; then financial institutions; and finally, non-financial institutions, or so-called end-users.

It is only with comprehensive regulation of the dealers at the center of this market that we can really oversee and regulate the entire derivatives markets. This was one of the key reforms that we laid out with Secretary Geithner and Mary Schapiro during the presidential transition five years ago. Subsequently, we worked with then Chairman Harkin of the Senate Agriculture Committee and others to ensure that there would be oversight of the dealers themselves.

Through regulating the dealers, we ensure that reform applies to both standardized and customized products.

You might remember the debate. Would there be an allowance for a bilateral or customized swap, ensuring the economy could get the benefit of all these hedging products? The answer was yes. Customized products would continue, but we would need to oversee the dealers that are offering those swaps.

By giving the CFTC clear authority to set business conduct standards, swap dealers and their nearly 10,000 counterparties around the globe have changed their swap documentation, lowering risk.

Today, we have 86 registered swap dealers and two major swap participants. This group includes the world’s 16 largest financial institutions in the global swaps market or what’s called the G16. It also includes a number of energy swap dealers.

The second group of market participants was financial institutions. There was a debate four years ago as to whether financial institutions were to be covered by reform. Our thinking was that if we didn’t include hedge funds, insurance companies, mortgage companies and the like, we would leave a significant part of the interconnected financial system outside of reform. Though not required to register as dealers, they came under two of the very critical reforms – the required clearing and the required trade execution. Congress did that, and we’ve executed on that plan.

The third group of market participants is the non-financial participants – the so-called “end-users.” It’s really the end-users, the non-financial side of our economy, that provide 94 percent of private-sector jobs in America. They only make up a small, single-digit percent of the swaps market. End-users were exempted from clearing and many other rules. For instance, the Commission’s proposed rule on margin provides that end-users do not have to post margin. They do have some responsibilities for recordkeeping and reporting.

Third, what would be the cross-border scope of reform?

Would reform just be territorial, such that only that which happened within the borders of the United States were covered? Or would it extend further?

Congress recognized that risk knows no geographic border. Look at AIG – it nearly brought down the economy – its operations were in London. It was actually registered as a French bank with a branch in London.

AIG wasn’t the only one. Lehman Brothers, Citigroup, Bear Stearns – Bear Stearns hedge funds, by the way, were incorporated in the Cayman Islands, as well as Citigroup’s off-balance-sheet Structured Investment Vehicles (SIVs). Ten years earlier, there was Long-Term Capital Management, a hedge fund operated out of Connecticut. You would have thought, as I did on a certain Sunday in September of 1998 when I visited it, that it was a U.S. person, even though it was booking its $1.2 trillion derivatives book in its Cayman Island affiliate.

Congress knew that the nature of modern finance is that financial institutions commonly set up hundreds, even thousands of institutions around the globe. When Lehman Brothers went down, it had 3,300 legal entities. When a run starts at any part of an overseas affiliate or branch in modern financial institution days, risk knows no geographic boundary. It comes right back here, just as our housing risk went offshore to other countries.

What Congress made clear in reform was that the far-flung operations of U.S. enterprises are to be covered. Congress said this in key words. We really need to thank Chairman Frank because he reached out to our agency and asked how to deal with what he called “risk importation?”

Our remarkable staff at the CFTC worked with his staff on the key words in the statute that say if it has “a direct and significant connection with activities in or effect on Commerce of the United States” it’s covered by reform. We were not going to just take a territorial approach. That’s really because Chairman Frank had the vision and foresight, asked for advice, got advice, and included, in a bipartisan way at the time, these key words in the statute.

The CFTC, coordinating closely with global regulators, completed cross-border guidance in July. Swaps market reform would cover transactions between non-U.S. dealers and guaranteed affiliates of U.S. persons. Why guaranteed affiliates? Because their risk can come right back here. Reforms also cover swaps entered into between two guaranteed affiliates or with the offshore branches of U.S. banks. Another more recent lesson comes from the events surrounding JPMorgan Chase’s Chief Investment Office, which booked their credit index swap trades through their London branch, which was fully part of the bank.

After allowing time for market participants to phase in compliance, this week, much of our cross-border guidance became effective. Yesterday, the final U.S. person guidance became effective. Based on that, hedge funds and other funds whose principal place of business is in the U.S. or majority owned by U.S. persons will clear and come into many other reforms.

Hedge funds like Long-Term Capital Management today would now clear standardized swaps. So no longer would a P.O. Box in the Cayman Islands or another nice vacation holiday spot be good enough to get out of reform.

Further, yesterday foreign branches of U.S. persons, that means branches of big U.S. banks, and guaranteed affiliates of U.S. financial institutions now have to comply with the clearing requirement.

Now, let me turn to the big decisions on substance.

Let me start with transparency.

Key to promoting efficiency in markets is transparency and access. Adam Smith in the Wealth of Nations wrote about this over 200 years ago. He contended that if the price of information is lowered or you make information free, in promoting such transparency, the economy benefits. Similarly, if access to the market is free, everybody gets to compete.

Transparency and access was not the swaps market as we knew it in 2008. It was opaque. Most people in the market couldn’t see the pricing, and access was really dominated by large dealers with trillion dollar plus balance sheets.

In bringing forward reform, there was a debate about whether transparency to regulators was enough or if we also needed public market transparency. Congress and the Administration determined that regulatory transparency wasn’t enough. We have put in place swap data repositories (SDRs) to provide transparency to regulators, and as of two weeks ago, there was $400 trillion notional of swaps in the data repositories (market facing and single counted swaps).

But that’s not enough. Adam Smith was about promoting transparency to the public, and that’s what Congress believed as well.

First, Congress responded that we need post-trade transparency. As of December 31 of this past year, we started putting it in place, and as of September 30, the last compliance date, the public and end-users can see the price and volume of each transaction as it occurs on a website, like a modern-day ticker tape.

Due to an amendment sponsored by Sen. Jack Reed during the conference, this post-trade transparency covers not only those transactions on an exchange or on a registered platform, it covers the entire marketplace – including customized swaps and off-exchange swaps.

Also Congress adopted an initiative to make sure there is transparency before the transaction. This covers the portion of the market for swap dealers and financial institutions trading swaps that are required to be cleared and made available for trading on a platform.

Starting this past week, on October 2, the public began to benefit as swap trading platforms, called swap execution facilities (SEFs), came under common-sense rules of the road. SEFs will require that the dealers and non-dealers alike are able to get impartial access -- another part of Adam Smith’s writings from 200 years ago.

Seventeen SEFS are currently registered and operating. It is truly a paradigm shift. It’s still early, but just to give you a few numbers, the first day there was about 1,200 trades on this collection of SEFS. Two or three days ago, it was 1,800 trades.

We do understand that there are going to be issues that arise. Just as we have for other reforms, we are going to try to work with market participants to smooth the transition. But let there not be any doubt – over time, market participants will benefit from enhanced pre-trade transparency because it brings competition into the marketplace.

A fifth key decision was regarding requiring central clearing.

Clearing has existed since the 1890s. It lowers risk to the market. The debate was not whether there was going to be clearing. It was who was going to be covered by it. Where Congress came out is that financial actors would be covered as well as the dealers.

The dealers in 2009 came together, and it’s been well reported, and said they could live with clearing, but they were contending it should be mandated only for between dealers. That was because they wanted to lower their risk between themselves. Congress responded and said no, it needs to cover 90-plus percent of the market. It has to cover financial enterprises as well to lower the risk of that interconnected market.

This month, with the completion of phased implementation, mandatory clearing of interest rate and credit index swaps is a reality for dealers, hedge funds, and other financial institutions. And with yesterday’s phase-in, it’s now also a reality for these P.O. Box hedge funds as well, and for the branches and guaranteed affiliates around the globe. In mid-September, 72 percent of new interest rate swaps were being cleared.

In the data repositories, there are currently $330 trillion of interest rate swaps, and $182 trillion, or 54 percent, were cleared.

The sixth key debate was regarding access.

Back to Adam Smith’s writings, how do you make a market competitive? You make information free, and you make access free. Congress got this right. It required, and the CFTC has followed, impartial access to trading venues. As these 17 SEFs have gone live, we are looking at each of their rulebooks to ensure they really provide impartial access -- that it’s not just a dealer-dominated platform, but other financial institutions and market participants can have access and compete in the marketplace.

When we come out of the shutdown, we’ll be calling up a few of these platforms and saying “I don’t think that’s consistent with the spirit of what Congress put in place.” Impartial access really means that the non-dealers as well as the dealers, the non-clearing members as well as the clearing members, have access. All of these parties can make bids and offers on a central-limit order book. All can respond as well as request quotes in an RFQ system. There’s not supposed to be two rooms in a swap execution facility, one for the insiders and one for the less dealer-oriented group.

Open access to clearing was a key piece that Congress included in reform as well. That means that the clearinghouses have to take swaps trades even if it’s not from their sister or affiliated trading platform. Of the 17 registered SEFs, only one of them is affiliated directly with a clearinghouse, and the other 16 are not. They all actually do have access to the main clearinghouses. This is significant.

We also put in place something called straight-through processing. It’s highly technical, but it was significantly debated. What it comes down to is – will there be real-time processing of a trade to a clearinghouse. Why is it critical? Because it creates great access when everybody knows that if they intend to clear a trade, they don’t have to worry about their counterparty’s credit risk. In the 1980s and 1990s and into the next decade, swaps became centered and concentrated with the bank sector because the banks are in the business of extending credit, and they have very large balance sheets. To bring access to everybody else, you need this highly technical, specialized thing called straight-through processing or real-time processing.

With regard to SEFs, we put out guidance on September 26 to ensure that straight-through processing is a reality, that it’s not just something in the CFTC rulebooks. That’s what we do, every step of the way. We’re trying to ensure that the vision of Congress, the vision of the Administration happens.

A seventh key decision related to intermediaries.

Were we going to register them or not? Registration or licensing means if you go on the roads, you have passed some test. You also are consenting in various states to the jurisdiction or the authority of the police. Registration is a critical part of reform – for dealers as well as to many others. I see Pat McCarty back there who worked for Sen. Blanche Lincoln. He ensured the word “swap” was put into each and every statutory definition for intermediaries – commodity pool operators, futures commission merchants, introducing brokers, every spot. The registration regime had to include swaps, not just futures.

An eighth key decision was on customer protection. This was not so much a decision Congress had – that was straightforward at the time. But after Dodd-Frank passed, we had to go back and ask -- what do we do to better protect customers? There were a lot of debates. We decided to reverse the loosening made in 2003-2005 on the investment of customer funds, in Rule 1.25. We required clearinghouses to move to something called gross margining -- they can no longer net two customers’ positions against each other. But there’s more that we need to do on customer protection when you look at the events in the last two years and the failings of a couple of big firms in that area.

A ninth key decision that Congress made was repealing what was called the “Enron loophole.”

You might remember that a law passed in 2000, the Commodity Futures Modernization Act, which included provisions that various trading platforms didn’t have to register with the CFTC. They didn’t have to have that driver’s license to be a trading platform. These platforms, whether they were for energy, foreign currency or interest rates, they didn’t have any oversight at all. Congress debated it, and it was a long debate. It reached its crescendo in the summer of 2008. There was a farm bill that passed that year that moved to close the “Enron loophole” that was partially successful. I’d even note that in June of 2008, then Senator Obama put out a release calling for fully closing the “Enron loophole.”

Why do I focus on this? Because it spilled over into the debate about SEFs. A footnote in the SEF rule, Footnote 88, has gotten much attention, both by the media and market participants. This Footnote 88 is just confirming what Congress did -- Congress closed the “Enron loophole.” I don’t see what the discussion is here. We put a footnote in confirming that Congress had closed this loophole. What it means is that all the platforms as of October 2 needed to register.

Now there are some questions that have come up about jurisdiction. What will trigger this registration? Which platforms will trigger it? I think that if anybody is asking the question, they may want to read the guidance we did on cross-border in July.

My own conservative advice is that if a multilateral trading platform itself is a U.S. person, they probably ought to register. If a platform itself is operating in New York or Chicago or elsewhere in the U.S., you’ve got to think that you’ve got a connection to activities or commerce in the U.S.

I would also say that if you permit U.S. persons or persons located in the U.S. – you’ve got a lot of folks located in New York or Connecticut or Chicago that are using your platform – you’d think that the platform has a direct and significant connection to the activities in the U.S., whether you’ve given direct or indirect access. My conservative advice would be that you would want to register.

I recognize that this approach would trigger some SEF registrations for foreign-based platforms that are already registered with their home country. We’ve had one such platform actually reach out to us from Australia. It’s going to register with us, and we’re working with the Australian home country regulators. We’re prepared to figure out where we might defer to those home country regulators. But the registration itself is important so that we have some oversight, some licensing if I can use that analogy.

We also along the way registered many commodity pools that had previously not registered with the CFTC because of exemptions from 2003. The repeal of these exemptions was actually the case that went to the DC Circuit.

A tenth key decision was on enforcement tools.

Prior to Dodd-Frank, our enforcement authority was more narrow. In particular, our anti-manipulation rules required us to prove that someone intentionally created an artificial price. Dodd-Frank filled gaps in our authority. As a result of Senator Cantwell’s amendment and our new rules, we have broad powers to prohibit reckless, fraud-based and other manipulative conduct. We also can use this new broad provision against any deceptive conduct in connection with futures and swaps. These authorities bring us in line with some similar authorities the SEC has had for years, as well as the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. These authorities expand our arsenal of enforcement tools and strengthen the Commission’s ability to effectively deal with threats to market integrity. We will use these tools to be a more effective cop on the beat to promote market integrity and protect market participants.

An eleventh decision was about compliance dates, phased compliance.

We as an agency were given by Congress one year to get everything done. We didn’t quite make that. We basically did it in three years – these 61 completed rules, orders and guidances. Congress also gave us another authority. They said nothing we put in place could be effective shorter than, I think it is 60 days after we have a completed rule. We chose to use the congressional authority to give more time. Sometimes we’d give a year. Sometimes we’d only give the two months. But we also sought public input on phased compliance to lower the costs of this change but also to make it work.

Phased compliance started with the anti-manipulation rules that went into effect in 2011. The next piece was that swap data repositories had to register with us. The big compliance date was one year ago, October 12 of 2012, when the whole reform went live, the definitions were in place. Dealers then registered in December. We started with 66. We have had 20 more -- 86 dealers have registered. Clearing was phased through this whole year. Real-time reporting was phased through this whole year. Now swap execution facilities are in place. We very much believe phased compliance smoothes this through because it is a monumental change.

Lastly, decision twelve, which was not directly in Dodd-Frank. A number of years ago, we decided to focus on reforms on the benchmarks that underlie the vast majority of the swaps market.

There are interest rate benchmarks called LIBOR, Euribor and others, if I can just call them the “ibors,” that are critical reference rates for our markets. In the U.S., LIBOR is the reference rate for 70 percent of the futures market and more than half of the swaps market. Thus, it is the most significant reference rate for the swaps market, which we’ve brought under reform.

A benchmark that is an underlying reference to a market, like these interest rate benchmarks, can only have market integrity if it is based on fact, not fiction. Unfortunately, what we have found with regard to LIBOR and Euribor is the underlying market, the so-called interbank market for unsecured lending between banks, has essentially dried up and no longer exists. Why is that? Well why does a bank really want to lend to another bank with an open line of credit, like a credit card loan? They only want to lend to each other like an auto loan or a mortgage. They want collateral to back that loan up. That market has shifted dramatically over the last ten or so years.

We’ve brought four big enforcement cases with regard to this, along with the Justice Department and international regulators. We’ve worked with international standard setters called International Organization of Securities Commissions to put in place a new paradigm for how benchmarks should be based on observable transactions – they need to be anchored in observable transactions. There needs to be a there, there. These benchmarks need better governance to ensure against conflicts of interest.

The Financial Stability Oversight Council, a reform out of Dodd-Frank, has spoken to need for benchmark reform and recommended that U.S. regulators work with foreign regulators and international bodies and market participants to really address two questions:

To promptly identify interest rate benchmarks anchored in observable transactions and supported by appropriate governance; and
To develop a plan to accomplish a transition.
It’s not going to be without challenges. These are the underlying benchmarks of $300 trillion plus in derivatives. But we have the ingenuity and the human spirit that we can make change. We cannot leave the system so frail that it has an underlying benchmark that is essentially fiction, not fact.

Those are the 12 big decisions that we’ve made along the way.

The government shutdown and resources are a challenge. Looking forward, our greatest challenge at the agency is not the shutdown. We’ll get through that. It is surreal having only 30 or so people at the agency, but we’ll get through the shutdown. We are a skeletal crew right now and at best we have a cursory oversight of the markets. Though we are dark, we have brought additional lightness to the markets with these new swap execution facilities and the cross-border guidance going into effect yesterday.

Looking past the shutdown, we’re only an agency of about 680 people. Far too small to oversee the markets that we’ve been tasked with from Congress. I think that’s a significant challenge for reform going forward.

I think the other significant challenge going forward is that as market participants look to maximize their revenues and customer support, as they should, they, at times, may look to arbitrage our rules versus other rules around the globe, or just arbitrage our rules against our rules, if they can.

I think that we’re in very firm setting on clearing, on data reporting, on real-time reporting, on some of the business conduct areas, reforms that all have been implemented. Right now, with this week’s implementation of cross-border and last week’s standing up of SEFs and, there’s bound to be challenges with regard to these reforms and we’ll get through them as they arise.

Lastly, just as Congress came together on new reforms in 2010, our regulations will need to evolve. They will need to evolve to stay abreast of market participants’ practice. We are hopeful that we got things right, but I think we always need to stay open that there may be things down the road that need to change.

Thank you. I’m pleased to take questions.

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

ICAP EUROPE LIMITED CHARGED BY SEC WITH ATTEMPTED MANIPULATION OF YEN LIBOR

FROM:   COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION 
CFTC Charges ICAP Europe Limited, a Subsidiary of ICAP plc, with Manipulation and Attempted Manipulation of Yen Libor
ICAP Europe Limited Ordered to Pay a $65 Million Civil Monetary Penalty

Washington, DC -- The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) today issued an Order against ICAP Europe Limited (ICAP), an interdealer broker, bringing and settling charges of manipulation, attempted manipulation, false reporting, and aiding and abetting derivatives traders’ manipulation and attempted manipulation, relating to the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR) for Yen. LIBOR is a critical benchmark interest rate used throughout the world as the basis for trillions of dollars of transactions. ICAP is a subsidiary of U.K.-based ICAP plc.

The CFTC’s Order finds that for more than four years, from at least October 2006 through at least January 2011, ICAP brokers on its Yen derivatives and cash desks knowingly disseminated false and misleading information concerning Yen borrowing rates to market participants in attempts to manipulate, at times successfully, the official fixing of the daily Yen LIBOR. ICAP brokers, including one known as “Lord LIBOR” or “Mr. LIBOR,” did so to aid and abet their highly valued client, who was a senior Yen derivatives trader (Senior Yen Trader) employed at UBS Securities Japan Co., Ltd. (UBS) and later at another bank, in his relentless attempts to manipulate Yen LIBOR to benefit his derivatives trading positions tied to this benchmark. On limited occasions, ICAP Yen brokers engaged in this unlawful conduct to benefit other derivatives traders as well. (See excerpts of relevant broker communications as a Related Link.)

The Order requires ICAP, among other things, to pay a $65 million civil monetary penalty, and cease and desist from further violations as charged. Pursuant to the Order, ICAP and ICAP plc also agree to take specified steps to ensure the integrity and reliability of benchmark interest rate-related market information disseminated by ICAP and certain other ICAP plc companies.

“ICAP and other interdealer brokers are expected to be honest middlemen,” said David Meister, the CFTC’s Director of Enforcement. “Here, certain ICAP brokers were anything but honest. They repeatedly abused their trusted role when they infected the financial markets with false information to aid their top client’s manipulation of LIBOR. As should be clear from today’s action, any market participant who seeks to undermine the integrity of a global benchmark interest rate must be held accountable.”

Yen LIBOR is fixed daily based on rates contributed by panel banks for Yen LIBOR that are supposed to reflect each bank’s assessment of costs of borrowing unsecured funds in the London interbank market. ICAP, as an interdealer broker, intermediates cash and LIBOR-based derivatives transactions between banks and other institutions. As a service to clients and to solicit and maintain business, ICAP also provides banks with market insight, including projections of likely LIBOR fixings, which are implicitly represented as ICAP’s unbiased assessment of borrowing costs and market pricing based on objective, observable data, some of which was uniquely in ICAP’s possession.

According to the CFTC’s Order, the UBS Senior Yen Trader called on ICAP Yen brokers more than 400 times for assistance in manipulating Yen LIBOR. ICAP brokers often accommodated the requests by issuing, via a Yen cash broker, group emails to panel banks and others containing “Suggested LIBORs” for Yen LIBOR. But rather than providing an honest and objective assessment of how Yen LIBOR would fix, the Suggested LIBORs reflected the preferred rates that would benefit the Senior Yen Trader.

The Order finds that almost all of the Yen LIBOR panel banks received the Suggested LIBORs, and several relied on them in making their Yen LIBOR submissions, particularly during the financial crisis of 2007-2009. Even panel banks that tried to make truthful Yen LIBOR submissions may have passed on false or misleading submissions, because they used ICAP brokers’ purportedly unbiased Suggested LIBORs to inform their LIBOR submissions.

According to the Order, the ICAP brokers referred to the panel bank submitters as “sheep” when they copied the Yen cash broker’s Suggested LIBORS. In fact, the Order finds that at least two banks’ submissions mirrored the Suggested LIBORs up to 90% of the time.

The Order further finds that the ICAP Yen Brokers provided these “LIBOR services” to keep the Senior Yen Trader’s business, which accounted for as much as 20% of the Yen derivatives desk’s revenue. “Mr. LIBOR,” the Yen cash broker who disseminated the false Suggested LIBORs, demanded compensation from the Yen derivatives desk for his “LIBOR services” or “no more mr libor.” This grew from dinners and champagne, to additional commission-generating trades, to “kick backs” totaling $72,000.

The Order further finds that this unlawful, manipulative conduct continued for more than four years, in part because ICAP’s supervision, internal controls, policies and procedures were inadequate. For example, ICAP never audited the Yen derivatives desk and left compliance oversight to the Yen derivatives desk head, who was complicit in the misconduct.

ICAP plc and ICAP Must Strengthen Internal Controls to Ensure Integrity and Reliability of Benchmark Interest Rate-Related Market Information

In addition to imposing a $65 million penalty, the CFTC Order requires ICAP and ICAP plc to implement and strengthen internal controls, policies and procedures governing benchmark interest rate-related market information that ICAP and certain ICAP plc companies send to market participants. Among other things, the Order requires ICAP and ICAP plc to:

• Base written benchmark interest rate-related predictions on certain factors;

• Document and retain basis for market publications;

• Require certain disclosures, including that certain market information reflects the opinions of the author, sources of information or data upon which opinion is based; and use of any models, correlated markets or related trading instruments;

• Review certain electronic and audio communications;

• Implement auditing, monitoring and training measures;

• Report to the CFTC on its compliance with the terms of the Order; and

• Continue to cooperate with the CFTC

The CFTC Order also recognizes the cooperation of ICAP Europe Limited with the Division of Enforcement in its investigation.

In a related action, the United Kingdom Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) issued a Final Notice regarding its enforcement action against ICAP Europe Limited and imposed a penalty of £14 million, the equivalent of approximately $22.4 million.

The CFTC acknowledges the valuable assistance of the FCA, the U.S. Department of Justice and the Washington Field Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

*******

With this Order, the CFTC has now imposed penalties of just under $1.3 billion on entities for manipulative conduct with respect to LIBOR submissions and other benchmark interest rates. See In the Matter of The Royal Bank of Scotland plc and RBS Securities Japan Limited, Order Instituting Proceedings Pursuant To Sections 6(c) And 6(d) Of The Commodity Exchange Act, Making Findings And Imposing Remedial Sanctions (February 6, 2013) ($325 Million penalty) (see CFTC Press Release 6510-13); In the Matter of UBS AG and UBS Securities Japan Co., Ltd., Order Instituting Proceedings Pursuant To Sections 6(c) And 6(d) Of The Commodity Exchange Act, Making Findings And Imposing Remedial Sanctions (December 19, 2012) ($700 Million penalty) (see CFTC Press Release 6472-12); and In the Matter of Barclays PLC, Barclays Bank PLC, and Barclays Capital Inc., Order Instituting Proceedings Pursuant To Sections 6(c) And 6(d) Of The Commodity Exchange Act, As Amended, Making Findings And Imposing Remedial Sanctions (June 27, 2012) ($200 million penalty) (see CFTC Press Release 6289-13). In the actions against the panel banks, the CFTC Orders also require the banks to comply with undertakings specifying the factors upon which benchmark interest rate submissions should be made, and requiring implementation of internal controls and policies needed to ensure the integrity and reliability of such communications.

CFTC Division of Enforcement staff members responsible for this case are Aimée Latimer-Zayets, Anne M. Termine, Maura M. Viehmeyer, James A. Garcia, Boaz Green, Kassra Goudarzi, Rishi K. Gupta, Jonathan K. Huth, Timothy M. Kirby, Terry Mayo, Elizabeth Padgett, Michael Solinsky, Philip P. Tumminio, Jason T. Wright, Gretchen L. Lowe, and Vincent A. McGonagle.

FROM:  COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION
Statement of Chairman Gary Gensler on Settlement Order against ICAP
September 25, 2013

Washington, DC — Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) Chairman Gary Gensler today made the following statement on the CFTC’s enforcement action that requires ICAP Europe Limited to pay a $65 million penalty for unlawful conduct related to LIBOR for yen:

“Today’s Order against ICAP once again shows how LIBOR, a critical benchmark interest rate not anchored in sufficient transactions, has been readily rigged. Unfortunately, this is yet another reminder of why we have to coordinate internationally to transition to an alternative to LIBOR to best restore the integrity to markets.

“Today’s Order also highlights the importance of Congress’ reforms through the Dodd-Frank Act to bring oversight to swaps trading platforms.  Required registration of swap execution facilities becomes a reality next week, finally closing exemptions that had allowed for unregistered, multilateral swaps trading platforms."

FROM:  COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION
“Champagne and Ferraris”

Statement of CFTC Commissioner Bart Chilton on the ICAP Order

September 25, 2013

Here we are, sadly, with traders again behaving badly. Another bust, another one bites the dust.

In this instance, ICAP brokers attempted to falsely report Libor rates in order to advantage another trader. This was insolent conduct impacting a benchmark rate that influences almost anything consumers buy on credit.  These benchmarks are just too important to become a playground for some big-talking bad guys.

Email exchanges exhibit total disregard for proper protocols. In one case, champagne was promised for a favorable fixing.  Some sought increased kickbacks or free meals—a curry meal for currying favors.  One even mentioned (perhaps in jest) a Ferrari as payment for the favors.  “They are making fortunes with these high fixings,” said one communication.

The attempts to manipulate Libor have been a black eye for our global financial system.  It’s good that we have made progress at cleaning up this monstrous mess.  I congratulate our Division of Enforcement for cracking yet another of these cases and appreciate the cooperative working relationship we have had with the Financial Conduct Authority in the U.K.

Let's hope other would-be crooks learn a lesson here and stay clear of future violations.

Note: Ponzimonium: How Scam Artists are Ripping Off America, is now available in a FREE EBOOK edition.


Tuesday, March 26, 2013

CFTC CHAIRMAN GENSLER'S SPEECH BEFORE THE INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND CONFERENCE

FROM: COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION
Remarks of Chairman Gary Gensler Before the International Monetary Fund Conference
March 20, 2013

Good afternoon. Thank you, José, for the kind introduction. I also want to thank the International Monetary Fund and Christine Lagarde for the invitation to speak today at your conference on commodity markets.

Derivatives Markets

Farmers, ranchers, producers, commercial companies and other end-users across the globe depend on well-functioning derivatives markets. These markets are essential so that end-users seeking to hedge a risk can lock in a future price of a commodity and thus focus on what they do best – efficiently producing commodities and other goods and services for the economy.

Derivatives markets have existed in the United States since the time of the Civil War. Initially, there were futures on agricultural commodities, including wheat, corn and cotton.

Futures allowed farmers to get price certainty on their crops. As they were planting their fields, farmers could lock in a price for harvest time. Farmers and producers also benefited from prices established in a central market, rather than just relying on competition for their harvested crops among local merchants.

In these central markets, hedgers seeking to reduce risk may meet other hedgers, but often meet speculators on the other side of the transaction.

In the 1920s, Congress brought the first federal oversight to the futures market. These reforms included bringing transparency to the marketplace by requiring that all grain futures be traded on central exchanges.

A federal regulator was established within the U.S. Department of Agriculture to oversee the grain futures market.

During the 1930s, President Roosevelt and Congress strengthened the common-sense rules of the road for these markets by adopting new prohibitions against manipulation, protections for customer funds and speculative position limits to promote market integrity.

By the 1970s, the futures market had expanded to include contracts on additional agricultural commodities, as well as metals.

Market participants also were considering further innovations to trade contracts on other risks in the economy, such as on energy products and financial instruments.

Congress understood this and broadened oversight of the futures markets to all commodities, including any that might be developed in the future.

The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) was established as in independent regulator in 1975, and took on this broader role from our predecessor in the Department of Agriculture.

The word commodity in our oversight regime covers agricultural, metals, energy and financial commodities, as well as any other future to manage risk based on any "services, rights and interests."

Thus, the word "commodity" in our oversight regime is more expansive than you are generally discussing at this conference.

In 1981, a new derivatives product emerged. These derivatives, called swaps, were initially transacted bilaterally, off-exchange. While the futures market has been regulated by the CFTC, the swaps marketplace in the United States, Europe and Asia lacked oversight.

What followed was the 2008 financial crisis. Eight million American jobs were lost. In contrast, the futures market, supported by the 1930s reforms, weathered the financial crisis.

President Obama and Congress responded and crafted the swaps provisions of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank Act).

They borrowed from what has worked best in the futures market for decades – clearing, oversight of intermediaries and transparency. The law gave the CFTC responsibility for swaps and the Securities and Exchange Commission responsibility for security-based swaps.

CFTC Mission

As of last year, the CFTC is charged with overseeing both the commodity futures market and the swaps market.

The CFTC is not a price-setting agency.

The mission of the CFTC is to ensure market transparency – both pre- and post-trade. Transparency lowers costs for investors, consumers and businesses. It increases liquidity, efficiency and competition.

The mission of the CFTC is to promote market integrity – to ensure that that the price discovery process is open, competitive and efficient.

The mission of the CFTC is to police the derivatives markets for fraud, manipulation and other abuses.

The mission of the CFTC is to lower the risks to the economy of clearinghouses and intermediaries, as well as ensuring for the protection of customer funds.

And the mission of the CFTC is to ensure these markets work for the real economy – the non-financial side that employs 94 percent of private sector jobs – so that hedgers and investors may use them with confidence.

Three years after the passage of the Dodd-Frank Act, the CFTC is nearly complete with the law’s swaps market reforms. The swaps marketplace is increasingly shifting to implementation of these common-sense rules of the road. For the first time, the public is benefiting from:
Greater access to the swaps market and the risk reduction that comes from centralized clearing.
Oversight of swap dealers; and
The transparency of seeing the price and volume of each swap transaction, available free of charge on a website like a modern-day tickertape.

Looking forward, it’s a priority that the Commission finishes rules to promote pre-trade transparency, including those for a new swaps trading platform, called swap execution facilities (SEFs), and the block rule for swaps.

Pre-trade transparency will allow buyers and sellers to meet and compete in the marketplace, just as they do in the futures and securities marketplaces. SEFs will allow market participants to view the prices of available bids and offers prior to making their decision on a swap transaction.

It’s also a priority that the Commission ensures the cross-border application of swaps market reform appropriately covers the risk of U.S. affiliates operating offshore.

If a run starts in one part of a modern financial institution, whether it's here or offshore, the risk comes back to our shores. That was true with Bear Stearns, which failed five years ago this month, AIG, Lehman Brothers, Citigroup and Long-Term Capital Management.

Thus, as the CFTC completes guidance regarding the cross-border application of swaps market reform, I believe it’s critical that the Dodd-Frank Act’s swaps reform applies to transactions entered into by branches of U.S. institutions offshore, between guaranteed affiliates offshore, and for hedge funds that are incorporated offshore but operate in the U.S. Where there are comparable and comprehensive home country rules and enforcement of those rules abroad, we can look to substituted compliance, but the transactions would still be covered.

Changing Markets

Since the 1980s, the swaps market has grown in size and complexity. It is now eight times as big as the futures market. From total notional amounts of less than $1 trillion in the 1980s, the notional value now ranges around $250 trillion in the United States.

Together, the notional value of the U.S. futures and swaps markets is approximately $300 trillion – or roughly$20 of derivatives for every dollar of goods and services produced in the U.S. economy.

The futures market has changed dramatically as well.

There has been a significant increase in electronic trading. Instead of face-to-face trading on an exchange floor, more than 85 percent of the futures volume in 2012 was traded electronically.

In addition, the makeup of the market has changed. While the futures market has always been where hedgers and speculators meet, today a significant majority of the market is made up of financial actors, such as swap dealers, hedge funds, pension funds and other financial entities.

For example, based upon CFTC data as of last week, only about 14 percent of long positions and about 13 percent of short positions in the crude oil market (NYMEX WTI contracts) were held by producers, merchants, processors and other users of the commodity.

Similarly, only about 18 percent of gross long positions and about 27 percent of gross short positions in the Chicago Board of Trade wheat market were held by producers, merchants, processors and other users of the commodity.

Furthermore, CFTC data published in 2011 shows the vast majority of trading volume in key futures markets – more than 80 percent in many contracts – is day trading or trading in calendar spreads.

Only a modest proportion of average daily trading volume results in reportable traders changing their net long or net short futures positions for the day. This means that about 20 percent or less of the trading is done by traders who bring a longer-term perspective to the market on the price of the commodity.

Modern technology has led to other dramatic changes in the markets. With advancements in cell phone technology, a farmer in Africa or Asia can see the world prices for these markets, whether set in Chicago or elsewhere. This technological advancement greatly increases access to the markets. Farmers around the globe can more fully benefit from the competitive market.

But modern technology also more tightly connects us all and highlights why we have to ensure the markets are transparent and free of fraud, manipulation, and other abuses.

Position Limits and Enforcement Authority

Since the reforms of the 1930s, the CFTC’s predecessor and now the CFTC have promoted market integrity with position limits, as well as the agency’s enforcement authority to police manipulative conduct.

Position Limits

Since the 1930s, Congress has prescribed position limits to protect against the burdens of excessive speculation, including those that may be caused by large concentrated positions.

When the CFTC set position limits in the past, the agency sought to ensure that the markets were made up of a broad group of participants.

At the core of our obligations is promoting market integrity, which the agency has historically interpreted to include ensuring that markets do not become too concentrated.

Position limits are a critical tool to ensure that a single trader does not accumulate an outsize position that could potentially affect integrity or liquidity in the marketplace.

As required by Congress in the Dodd-Frank Act, in October 2011 the CFTC finalized a rule to establish position limits for futures, options and swaps on 28 physical commodities.

A group of financial associations is challenging this rule in court. I believe it’s critical that we continue our efforts to put in place aggregate speculative position limits across futures and swaps on physical commodities.

Enforcement Authority

In the United States, we have strong prohibitions against misconduct that can affect the integrity of our markets, which were further strengthened by Congress in the Dodd-Frank Act.

Our laws prohibit successful manipulations, where the wrongdoer intended to and actually did manipulate a price.

But we also cover a much broader swath of misconduct.

Our laws prohibit all attempts at manipulation, and all manipulative or deceptive schemes, where the wrongdoer acted recklessly. In addition, our laws prohibit the transmission of false information that may tend to affect the price of a commodity.

These laws, aggressively and fairly enforced, are designed to protect market participants and the integrity of our markets. The international community can draw on these provisions to enhance their own regulatory regimes.

International Coordination

Other market jurisdictions have made progress on position limits and attempted manipulation provisions.

In November 2011, the G-20 leaders endorsed an International Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO) report noting that market regulators should have and use formal position management authorities, including the power to set position limits, to prevent market abuses.

Most jurisdictions with commodity derivatives markets have subsequently implemented or are moving forward on position management authorities. For instance, the European legislative bodies are considering a position limit regime for the European Union.

In addition, European legislative bodies are considering proposals that would include attempted market manipulation within its regulatory framework.

As the CFTC works with our global counterparts on swaps market reform, we are advocating for a consistent approach with regard to these reforms.

The Importance of an Effective Market Regulator

In conclusion, farmers, ranchers, producers and consumers need to have confidence that derivatives markets are free of fraud, manipulation and other abuses.

The end-users in the non-financial side of the economy benefit from transparency both before and after the trade. End-users benefit from open and competitive markets where no one party has an outsized position.

The CFTC is nearly complete with the swaps market reforms that have brought clearing, oversight of intermediaries and transparency to the once dark swaps market.

But for the CFTC to effectively ensure market integrity, it is critical for the agency to be well-resourced.

At 684 people, we are just 7 percent larger than we were 20 years ago.

Simply put, the CFTC is not the right size for the new and expanded mission Congress has directed it to perform.

Saturday, February 16, 2013

CFTC CHAIRMAN GENSLER SPEAKS ON FUTURES REFORM

FROM: U.S. COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION
Testimony of Gary Gensler, Chairman, Commodity Futures Trading Commission before the U.S. Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee, Washington, DC

February 14, 2013


Good morning Chairman Johnson, Ranking Member Crapo and members of the Committee. I thank you for inviting me to today’s hearing on implementation of Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank Act) swaps market reforms. I am pleased to testify along with my fellow regulators. I also want to thank the CFTC Commissioners and staff for their hard work and dedication.

The New Era of Swaps Market Reform

This hearing is occurring at an historic time in the markets. The CFTC now oversees the derivatives marketplace – across both futures and swaps. The marketplace is increasingly shifting to implementation of the common-sense rules of the road for the swaps market that Congress included in the Dodd-Frank Act.

For the first time, the public is benefiting from seeing the price and volume of each swap transaction. This post-trade transparency builds upon what has worked for decades in the futures and securities markets. The new swaps market information is available free of charge on a website, like a modern-day ticker tape.

For the first time, the public will benefit from the greater access to the markets and the risk reduction that comes with central clearing. Required clearing of interest rate and credit index swaps between financial entities begins next month.

For the first time, the public will benefit from specific oversight of swap dealers. As of today, 71 swap dealers are provisionally registered. They are subject to standards for sales practices, recordkeeping and business conduct to help lower risk to the economy and protect the public from fraud and manipulation. The full list of registered swap dealers is on the CFTC’s website, and we will update it as more entities register.

An earlier economic crisis led President Roosevelt and Congress to enact similar common-sense rules of the road for the futures and securities markets. I believe these critical reforms of the 1930s have been at the foundation of our strong capital markets and many decades of economic growth.

In the 1980s, the swaps market emerged. Until now, though, it had lacked the benefit of rules to promote transparency, lower risk and protect the public, rules that we have come to depend upon in the securities and futures markets. What followed was the 2008 financial crisis. Eight million American jobs were lost. In contrast, the futures market, supported by earlier reforms, weathered the financial crisis.

Congress and President Obama responded to the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression and carefully crafted the Dodd-Frank swaps provisions. They borrowed from what has worked best in the futures market for decades: transparency, clearing and oversight of intermediaries.

The CFTC has largely completed swaps market rulewriting, with 80 percent behind us. On October 12, the CFTC and Securities and Exchange Commission’s (SEC) foundational definition rules went into effect. This marked the new era of swaps market reform.

The CFTC is seeking to consider and finalize the remaining Dodd-Frank swaps reforms this year. In addition, as Congress directed the CFTC to do, I believe it’s critical that we continue our efforts to put in place aggregate speculative position limits across futures and swaps on physical commodities.

The agency has completed each of our reforms with an eye toward ensuring that the swaps market works for end-users, America’s primary job providers. It’s the end-users in the non-financial side of our economy that provide 94 percent of private sector jobs.

The CFTC’s swaps market reforms benefit end-users by lowering costs and increasing access to the markets. They benefit end-users through greater transparency – shifting information from Wall Street to Main Street. Following Congress’ direction, end-users are not required to bring swaps into central clearing. Further, the Commission’s proposed rule on margin provides that end-users will not have to post margin for uncleared swaps. Also, non-financial companies, other than those genuinely making markets in swaps, will not be required to register as swap dealers. Lastly, when end-users are required to report their transactions, they are given more time to do so than other market participants.

Congress also authorized the CFTC to provide relief from the Dodd-Frank Act’s swaps reforms for certain electricity and electricity-related energy transactions between rural electric cooperatives and federal, state, municipal and tribal power authorities. Similarly, Congress authorized the CFTC to provide relief for certain transactions on markets administered by regional transmission organizations and independent system operators. The CFTC is looking to soon finalize two exemptive orders related to these various transactions, as Congress authorized.

The CFTC has worked to complete the Dodd-Frank reforms in a deliberative way – not against a clock. We have been careful to consider significant public input, as well as the costs and benefits of each rule. CFTC Commissioners and staff have met more than 2,000 times with members of the public, and we have held 22 public roundtables. The agency has received more than 39,000 comment letters on matters related to reform. Our rules also have benefited from close consultation with domestic and international regulators and policymakers.

Throughout this process, the Commission has sought input from market participants on appropriate schedules to phase in compliance with swaps reforms. Now, over two-and-a-half years since Dodd-Frank passed and with 80 percent of our rules finalized, the market is moving to implementation. Thus, it’s the natural order of things that market participants have questions and have come to us for further guidance. The CFTC welcomes inquiries from market participants, as some fine-tuning is expected. As it is sometimes the case with human nature, the agency receives many inquiries as compliance deadlines approach.

My fellow commissioners and I, along with CFTC staff, have listened to market participants and thoughtfully sorted through issues as they were brought to our attention, as we will continue to do.

I now will go into further detail on the Commission’s swaps market reform efforts.

Transparency – Lowering Cost and Increasing Liquidity, Efficiency, Competition

Transparency – a longstanding hallmark of the futures market – both pre- and post-trade – lowers costs for investors, consumers and businesses. It increases liquidity, efficiency and competition. A key benefit of swaps reform is providing this critical pricing information to businesses and other end-users across this land that use the swaps market to lock in a price or hedge a risk.

As of December 31, 2012, provisionally registered swap dealers are reporting in real time their interest rate and credit index swap transactions to the public and to regulators through swap data repositories. These are some of the same products that were at the center of the financial crisis. Building on this, swap dealers will begin reporting swap transactions in equity, foreign exchange and other commodity asset classes on February 28. Other market participants will begin reporting April 10.

With these transparency reforms, the public and regulators now have their first full window into the swaps marketplace.

Time delays for reporting currently range from 30 minutes to longer, but will generally be reduced to 15 minutes this October for interest rate and credit index swaps. For other asset classes, the time delay will be reduced next January. After the CFTC completes the block rule for swaps, trades smaller than a block will be reported as soon as technologically practicable.

To further enhance liquidity and price competition, the CFTC is working to finish the pre-trade transparency rules for swap execution facilities (SEFs), as well as the block rule for swaps. SEFs would allow market participants to view the prices of available bids and offers prior to making their decision on a transaction. These rules will build on the democratization of the swaps market that comes with the clearing of standardized swaps.

Clearing – Lowering Risk and Democratizing the Market

Since the late 19th century, clearinghouses have lowered risk for the public and fostered competition in the futures market. Clearing also has democratized the market by fostering access for farmers, ranchers, merchants, and other participants.

A key milestone was reached in November 2012 with the CFTC’s adoption of the first clearing requirement determinations. The vast majority of interest rate and credit default index swaps will be brought into central clearing. This follows through on the U.S. commitment at the 2009 G-20 meeting that standardized swaps should be brought into central clearing by the end of 2012. Compliance will be phased in throughout this year. Swap dealers and the largest hedge funds will be required to clear March 11, and all other financial entities follow June 10. Accounts managed by third party investment managers and ERISA pension plans have until September 9 to begin clearing.

Consistent with the direction of Dodd-Frank, the Commission in the fall of 2011 adopted a comprehensive set of rules for the risk management of clearinghouses. These final rules were consistent with international standards, as evidenced by the Principles for Financial Market Infrastructures (PFMIs) consultative document that had been published by the Committee on Payment and Settlement Systems and the International Organization of Securities Commissions (CPSS-IOSCO).

In April of 2012, CPSS-IOSCO issued the final PFMIs. The Commission’s clearinghouse risk management rules cover the vast majority of the standards set forth in the final PFMIs. There are a small number of areas where it may be appropriate to augment our rules to meet those standards, particularly as it relates to systemically important clearinghouses. I have directed staff to work expeditiously to recommend the necessary steps so that the Commission may implement any remaining items from the PFMIs not yet incorporated in our clearinghouse rules. I look forward to the Commission considering action on this in 2013.

I expect that soon we will complete a rule to exempt swaps between certain affiliated entities within a corporate group from the clearing requirement. This year, the CFTC also will be considering possible clearing determinations for other commodity swaps, including energy swaps.

Swap Dealer Oversight - Promoting Market Integrity and Lowering Risk

Comprehensive oversight of swap dealers, a foundational piece of Dodd-Frank, will promote market integrity and lower risk to taxpayers and the rest of the economy. Congress wanted end-users to continue benefitting from customized swaps (those not brought into central clearing) while being protected through the express oversight of swap dealers. In addition, Dodd-Frank extended the CFTC’s existing oversight of previously regulated intermediaries to include their swaps activity. Such intermediaries have historically included futures commission merchants, introducing brokers, commodity pool operators, and commodity trading advisors.

As the result of CFTC rules completed in the first half of last year, 71 swap dealers are now provisionally registered. This initial group of dealers includes the largest domestic and international financial institutions dealing in swaps with U.S. persons. It includes the 16 institutions commonly referred to as the G16 dealers. Other entities are expected to register over the course of this year once they exceed the de minimis threshold for swap dealing activity.

In addition to reporting trades to both regulators and the public, swap dealers will implement crucial back office standards that lower risk and increase market integrity. These include promoting the timely confirmation of trades and documentation of the trading relationship. Swap dealers also will be required to implement sales practice standards that prohibit fraud, treat customers fairly and improve transparency. These reforms are being phased in over the course of this year.

The CFTC is collaborating closely domestically and internationally on a global approach to margin requirements for uncleared swaps. We are working along with the Federal Reserve, the other U.S. banking regulators, the SEC and our international counterparts on a final set of standards to be published by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision and the International Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO). The CFTC’s proposed margin rules excluded non-financial end-users from margin requirements for uncleared swaps. We have been advocating with global regulators for an approach consistent with that of the CFTC. I would anticipate that the CFTC, in consultation with European regulators, would take up a final margin rules, as well as related rules on capital, in the second half of this year.

Following Congress’ mandate, the CFTC also is working with our fellow domestic financial regulators to complete the Volcker Rule. In adopting the Volcker rule, Congress prohibited banking entities from proprietary trading, an activity that may put taxpayers at risk. At the same time, Congress permitted banking entities to engage in certain activities, such as market making and risk mitigating hedging. One of the challenges in finalizing a rule is achieving these multiple objectives.

International Coordination on Swaps Market Reform

In enacting financial reform, Congress recognized the basic lessons of modern finance and the 2008 crisis. During a default or crisis, risk knows no geographic border. Risk from our housing and financial crisis contributed to economic downturns around the globe. Further, if a run starts on one part of a modern financial institution, almost regardless of where it is around the globe, it invariably means a funding and liquidity crisis rapidly spreads and infects the entire consolidated financial entity.

This phenomenon was true with the overseas affiliates and operations of AIG, Lehman Brothers, Citigroup, and Bear Stearns.

AIG Financial Products, for instance, was a Connecticut subsidiary of New York insurance giant that used a French bank license to basically run its swaps operations out of Mayfair in London. Its collapse nearly brought down the U.S. economy.

Last year’s events of JPMorgan Chase, where it executed swaps through its London branch, are a stark reminder of this reality of modern finance. Though many of these transactions were entered into by an offshore office, the bank here in the United States absorbed the losses. Yet again, this was a reminder that in modern finance, trades booked offshore by U.S. financial institutions should not be confused with keeping that risk offshore.

Failing to incorporate these basic lessons of modern finance into the CFTC’s oversight of the swaps market would fall short of the goals of Dodd-Frank reform. It would leave the public at risk.

More specifically, I believe that Dodd-Frank reform applies to transactions entered into by overseas branches of U.S. entities with non-U.S. persons, as well as between overseas affiliates guaranteed by U.S. entities. Failing to do so would mean American jobs and markets may move offshore, but, particularly in times of crisis, risk would come crashing back to our economy.

Similar lessons of modern finance were evident, as well, with the collapse of the hedge fund Long-Term Capital Management in 1998. It was run out of Connecticut, but its $1.2 trillion swaps were booked in its Cayman Islands affiliate. The risk from those activities, as the events of the time highlighted, had a direct and significant effect here in the United States.

The same was true when Bear Stearns in 2007 bailed out two of its sinking hedge fund affiliates, which had significant investments in subprime mortgages. They both were organized offshore. This was just the beginning of the end, as within months, the Federal Reserve provided extraordinary support for the failing Bear Stearns.

We must thus ensure that collective investment vehicles, including hedge funds, that either have their principal place of business in the United States or are directly or indirectly majority owned by U.S. persons are not able to avoid the clearing requirement – or any other Dodd-Frank requirement – simply due to how they might be organized.

We are hearing, though, that some swap dealers may be promoting to hedge funds an idea to avoid required clearing, at least during an interim period from March until July. I would be concerned if, in an effort to avoid clearing, swap dealers route to their foreign affiliates trades with hedge funds organized offshore, even though such hedge funds’ principle place of business was in the United States or they are majority owned by U.S. persons. The CFTC is working to ensure that this idea does not prevail and develop into a practice that leaves the American public at risk. If we don’t address this, the P.O boxes may be offshore, but the risk will flow back here.

Congress understood these issues and addressed this reality of modern finance in Section 722(d) of the Dodd-Frank Act, which states that swaps reforms shall not apply to activities outside the United States unless those activities have "a direct and significant connection with activities in, or effect on, commerce of the United States." Congress provided this provision solely for swaps under the CFTC’s oversight and provided a different standard for securities-based swaps under the SEC’s oversight.

To give financial institutions and market participants guidance on 722(d), the CFTC last June sought public consultation on its interpretation of this provision. The proposed guidance is a balanced, measured approach, consistent with the cross-border provisions in Dodd-Frank and Congress’ recognition that risk easily crosses borders.

Pursuant to Commission guidance, foreign firms that do more than a de minimis amount of swap-dealing activity with U.S. persons would be required to register with the CFTC within about two months after crossing the de minimis threshold. A number of international financial institutions are among the 71 swap dealers that are provisionally registered with the CFTC.

Where appropriate, we are committed to permitting, foreign firms and, in certain circumstances, overseas branches and guaranteed affiliates of U.S. swap dealers, to comply with Dodd-Frank through complying with comparable and comprehensive foreign regulatory requirements. We call this substituted compliance.

For foreign swap dealers, we would allow such substituted compliance for requirements that apply across a swap dealer’s entity, as well as for certain transaction-level requirements when facing overseas branches of U.S. entities and overseas affiliates guaranteed by U.S. entities. Entity-level requirements include capital, chief compliance officer and swap data recordkeeping. Transaction-level requirements include clearing, margin, real-time public reporting, trade execution, trading documentation and sales practices.

When foreign swaps dealers transact with a U.S. person, though, compliance with Dodd-Frank is required.

To assist foreign swap dealers with Dodd-Frank compliance, the CFTC recently finalized an exemptive order that applies until mid-July 2013. This Final Order for foreign swap dealers incorporates many suggestions from the ongoing consultation on cross-border issues with foreign regulatory counterparts and market participants. For instance, the definition of "U.S. person" in the Order benefited from the comments in response to the July 2012 proposal.

Under this Final Order, foreign swap dealers may phase in compliance with certain entity-level requirements. In addition, the Order provides time-limited relief for foreign dealers from specified transaction-level requirements when they transact with overseas affiliates guaranteed by U.S. entities, as well as with foreign branches of U.S. swap dealers.

The Final Order provides time for the Commission to continue working with foreign regulators as they implement comparable swaps reforms and as the Commission considers substituted compliance determinations for the various foreign jurisdictions with entities that have registered as swap dealers under Dodd-Frank.

The CFTC will continue engaging with our international counterparts through bilateral and multilateral discussions on reform and cross-border swaps activity. Just last week, SEC Chairman Walter and I had a productive meeting with international market regulators in Brussels.

Given our different cultures, political systems and legislative mandates some differences are unavoidable, but we’ve made great progress internationally on an aligned approach to reform. The CFTC is committed to working through any instances where we are made aware of a conflict between U.S. law and that of another jurisdiction.

Customer Protection

Dodd-Frank included provisions directing the CFTC to enhance the protection of swaps customer funds. While it was not a requirement of Dodd-Frank, in 2009 the CFTC also reviewed our existing customer protection rules for futures market customers. As a result, a number of our customer protection enhancements affect both futures and swaps market customers. I would like to review our finalized enhancements, as well as an important customer protection proposal.

The CFTC’s completed amendments to rule 1.25 regarding the investment of customer funds benefit both futures and swaps customers. The amendments include preventing in-house lending of customer money through repurchase agreements.The CFTC’s gross margining rules for futures and swaps customers require clearinghouses to collect margin on a gross basis. Futures commission merchants (FCMs) are no longer able to offset one customer’s collateral against another or to send only the net to the clearinghouse.

Swaps customers further benefit from the new so-called LSOC (legal segregation with operational comingling) rules, which ensure their money is protected individually all the way to the clearinghouse.

The Commission also worked closely with market participants on new rules for customer protection adopted by the self-regulatory organization (SRO), the National Futures Association. These include requiring FCMs to hold sufficient funds for U.S. foreign futures and options customers trading on foreign contract markets (in Part 30 secured accounts). Starting last year, they must meet their total obligations to customers trading on foreign markets computed under the net liquidating equity method. In addition, FCMs must maintain written policies and procedures governing the maintenance of excess funds in customer segregated and Part 30 secured accounts. Withdrawals of 25 percent or more would necessitate pre-approval in writing by senior management and must be reported to the designated SRO and the CFTC.

These steps were significant, but market events have further highlighted that the Commission must do everything within our authorities and resources to strengthen oversight programs and the protection of customers and their funds.

In the fall of 2012, the Commission sought public comment on a proposal to further enhance the protection of customer funds.

The proposal, which the CFTC looks forward to finalizing this year, would strengthen the controls around customer funds at FCMs. It would set new regulatory accounting requirements and would raise minimum standards for independent public accountants who audit FCMs. And it would provide regulators with daily direct electronic access to the FCMs’ bank and custodial accounts for customer funds. Last week, the CFTC held a public roundtable on this proposal, the third roundtable focused on customer protection.

Further, the CFTC intends to finalize a rule this year on segregation for uncleared swaps.

Benchmark Interest Rates

I’d like to now turn to the three cases the CFTC brought against Barclays, UBS and RBS for manipulative conduct with respect to the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR) and other benchmark interest rate submissions. The reason it’s important to focus on these matters is not because there were $2.5 billion in fines, though the U.S. penalties against these three banks of more than $2 billion were significant. What this is about is the integrity of the financial markets. When a reference rate, such as LIBOR – central to borrowing, lending and hedging in our economy – has been so readily and pervasively rigged, it’s critical that we discuss how to best change the system. We must ensure that reference rates are honest and reliable reflections of observable transactions in real markets.

The three cases shared a number of common traits. Foremost, at each institution the misconduct spanned multiple years, involved offices in multiple cities around the globe, included numerous people, and affected multiple benchmark rates and currencies. In each case, there was evidence of collusion among banks. In both the UBS and RBS cases, one or more inter-dealer brokers were asked to paint false pictures to influence submissions of other banks, i.e., to spread the falsehoods more widely. At Barclays and UBS, the banks also were reporting falsely low borrowing rates in an effort to protect their reputation.

Why does this matter?

The derivatives marketplace that the CFTC oversees started about 150 years ago. Futures contracts initially were linked to physical commodities, like corn and wheat. Such clear linkage ultimately comes from the ability of farmers, ranchers and other market participants to physically deliver the commodity at the expiration of the contract. As the markets evolved, cash-settled contracts emerged, often linked to markets for financial commodities, like the stock market or interest rates. These cash-settled derivatives generally reference indices or benchmarks.

Whether linked to physical commodities or indices, derivatives – both futures and swaps – should ultimately be anchored to observable prices established in real underlying cash markets. And it’s only when there are real transactions entered into at arm’s length between buyers and sellers that we can be confident that prices are discovered and set accurately.

When market participants submit for a benchmark rate that lacks observable underlying transactions, even if operating in good faith, they may stray from what real transactions would reflect. When a benchmark is separated from real transactions, it is more vulnerable to misconduct.

Today, LIBOR is the reference rate for 70 percent of the U.S. futures market, most of the swaps market and nearly half of U.S. adjustable rate mortgages. It’s embedded in the wiring of our financial system.

The challenge we face is that the market for interbank, unsecured borrowing has largely diminished over the last five years. Some say that it is essentially nonexistent. In 2008, Mervyn King, the governor of the Bank of England, said of Libor: "It is, in many ways, the rate at which banks do not lend to each other."

The number of banks willing to lend to one another on such terms has been sharply reduced because of economic turmoil, including the 2008 global financial crisis, the European debt crisis that began in 2010, and the downgrading of large banks’ credit ratings. In addition, there have been other factors that have led to unsecured, interbank lending drying up, including changes to Basel capital rules and central banks providing funding directly to banks.

Fortunately, much work is occurring internationally to address these issues. I want to commend the work of Martin Wheatley and the UK Financial Services Authority (FSA) on the "Wheatley Review of LIBOR." Additionally, the CFTC and the FSA are co-chairing the International Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO) Task Force that is developing international principles for benchmarks and examining best mechanisms or protocols for transition, if needed. On January 11, the IOSCO Task Force published the Consultation Report on Financial Benchmarks.

The consultation report said: "The Task Force is of the view that a benchmark should as a matter of priority be anchored by observable transactions entered into at arm’s length between buyers and sellers in order for it to function as a credible indicator of prices, rates or index values." It went on to say: "However, at some point, an insufficient level of actual transaction data raises concerns as to whether the benchmark continues to reflect prices or rates that have been formed by the competitive forces of supply and demand."

Among the questions for the public in the report are the following:
What are the best practices to ensure that benchmark rates honestly reflect market prices?
What are best practices for benchmark administrators and submitters?
What factors should be considered in determining whether a current benchmark’s underlying market is sufficiently robust? For instance, what is an insufficient level of actual transaction activity?
And what are the best mechanisms or protocols to transition from an unreliable or obsolete benchmark?

On February 20, we are holding a public roundtable in London. On February 26, the CFTC is hosting a second roundtable to gather input from market participants and other interested parties. A final report incorporating this crucial public input will be published this spring.

Resources

The CFTC’s hardworking team of 690 is less than 10 percent more in numbers than at our peak in the 1990s. Yet since that time, the futures market has grown five-fold, and the swaps market is eight times larger than the futures market.

Market implementation of swaps reforms means additional resources for the CFTC are all the more essential. Investments in both technology and people are needed for effective oversight of these markets by regulators – like having more cops on the beat.

Though data has started to be reported to the public and to regulators, we need the staff and technology to access, review and analyze the data. Though 71 entities have registered as new swap dealers, we need people to answer their questions and work with the NFA on the necessary oversight to ensure market integrity. Furthermore, as market participants expand their technological sophistication, CFTC technology upgrades are critical for market surveillance and to enhance customer fund protection programs

Without sufficient funding for the CFTC, the nation cannot be assured this agency can closely monitor for the protection of customer funds and utilize our enforcement arm to its fullest potential to go after bad actors in the futures and swaps markets. Without sufficient funding for the CFTC, the nation cannot be assured that this agency can effectively enforce essential rules that promote transparency and lower risk to the economy.

The CFTC is currently funded at $207 million. To fulfill our mission for the benefit of the public, the President requested $308 million for fiscal year 2013 and 1,015 full-time employees.

Thank you again for inviting me today, and I look forward to your questions.