2010-29009

FR Doc 2010-29009[Federal Register: November 23, 2010 (Volume 75, Number 225)]

[Proposed Rules]

[Page 71397-71408]

From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]

[DOCID:fr23no10-19]

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COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION

17 CFR Part 23

RIN 3038-AC96

Regulations Establishing and Governing the Duties of Swap Dealers

and Major Swap Participants

AGENCY: Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.

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SUMMARY: The Commodity Futures Trading Commission is proposing

regulations to implement new statutory provisions enacted by Title VII

of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act. The

proposed regulations set forth certain duties imposed upon swap dealers

and major swap participants registered with the Commission with regard

to: Risk management procedures; monitoring of trading to prevent

violations of applicable position limits; diligent supervision;

business continuity and disaster recovery; disclosure and the ability

of regulators to obtain general information; and antitrust

considerations. The proposed regulations would implement the new

statutory framework of section 4s(j) of the Commodity Exchange Act,

added by section 731 of the Dodd-Frank Act, excepting regulations

related to conflicts of interest pursuant to section 4s(j)(5), which

will be addressed in a separate rulemaking. These regulations set forth

certain duties with which swap dealers and major swap participants must

comply to maintain registration as a swap dealer or major swap

participant.

DATES: Submit comments on or before January 24, 2011.

ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by RIN number 3038-AC96

and Duties of Swap Dealers and Major Swap Participants, by any of the

following methods:

[[Page 71398]]

Agency Web site, via its Comments Online process at http:/

/comments.cftc.gov. Follow the instructions for submitting comments

through the Web site.

Mail: David Stawick, Secretary of the Commission,

Commodity Futures Trading Commission, Three Lafayette Centre, 1155 21st

Street, NW., Washington, DC 20581.

Hand Delivery/Courier: Same as mail above.

Federal eRulemaking Portal: http://www.regulations.gov.

Follow the instructions for submitting comments.

Please submit your comments using only one method.

All comments must be submitted in English, or if not, accompanied

by an English translation. Comments will be posted as received to

http://www.cftc.gov. You should submit only information that you wish

to make available publicly. If you wish the Commission to consider

information that may be exempt from disclosure under the Freedom of

Information Act, a petition for confidential treatment of the exempt

information may be submitted according to the procedures established in

CFTC Regulation 145.9, 17 CFR 145.9.

The Commission reserves the right, but shall have no obligation, to

review, pre-screen, filter, redact, refuse or remove any or all of your

submission from http://www.cftc.gov that it may deem to be

inappropriate for publication, such as obscene language. All

submissions that have been redacted or removed that contain comments on

the merits of the rulemaking will be retained in the public comment

file and will be considered as required under the Administrative

Procedure Act and other applicable laws, and may be accessible under

the Freedom of Information Act.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Sarah E. Josephson, Associate

Director, 202-418-5684, [email protected]; Frank N. Fisanich, Special

Counsel, 202-418-5949, [email protected]; or Jocelyn Partridge,

Special Counsel, 202-418-5926, [email protected]; Division of

Clearing and Intermediary Oversight, Commodity Futures Trading

Commission, Three Lafayette Centre, 1155 21st Street, NW., Washington,

DC 20581.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

I. Background

On July 21, 2010, President Obama signed the Dodd-Frank Wall Street

Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank Act).\1\ Title VII of

the Dodd-Frank Act \2\ amended the Commodity Exchange Act (CEA) \3\ to

establish a comprehensive regulatory framework to reduce risk, increase

transparency, and promote market integrity within the financial system

by, among other things: (1) Providing for the registration and

comprehensive regulation of swap dealers and major swap participants;

(2) imposing clearing and trade execution requirements on standardized

derivative products; (3) creating rigorous recordkeeping and real-time

reporting regimes; and (4) enhancing the rulemaking and enforcement

authorities of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (Commission or

CFTC) with respect to all registered entities and intermediaries

subject to the Commission's oversight.

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

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

Dodd-Frank Act may be accessed at http://www.cftc.gov/LawRegulation/

OTCDERIVATIVES/index.htm.

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

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

2010.''

\3\ 7 U.S.C. 1 et seq.

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Section 731 of the Dodd-Frank Act amends the CEA by inserting after

section 4r a new section 4s that sets forth registration and regulatory

requirements, including a variety of business conduct standards and

duties, with which swap dealers and major swap participants must comply

to maintain registration as a swap dealer or major swap participant.

As part of an overall business conduct regime for swap dealers and

major swap participants, section 4s(j) of the CEA sets forth certain

duties for swap dealers and major swap participants, including the duty

to: (1) Monitor trading to prevent violations of applicable position

limits; (2) establish risk management procedures adequate for managing

the day-to-day business of the swap dealer or major swap participant;

(3) disclose to the Commission and to applicable prudential regulators

\4\ general information relating to swaps trading, practices, and

financial integrity; (4) establish and enforce internal systems and

procedures to obtain information needed to perform all of the duties

prescribed by Commission regulations; (5) implement conflict-of-

interest systems and procedures; \5\ and (6) refrain from taking any

action that would result in an unreasonable restraint of trade or

impose a material anticompetitive burden on trading or clearing. In

this release, the Commission is proposing six regulations specifically

addressing risk management, monitoring of positions limits, diligent

supervision, business continuity and disaster recovery, the

availability of general information, and antitrust considerations. The

Commission would adopt these implementing regulations pursuant to

authority granted under sections 4s(h)(1)(D), 4s(h)(3)(D), 4s(j)(7),

and 8a(5) of the CEA.\6\ The Dodd-Frank Act requires the Commission to

promulgate these provisions by July 15, 2011.

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\4\ This term is defined for the purposes of this rulemaking and

generally has the same meaning as section 1(a)(39) of the Commodity

Exchange Act, which includes the Board of Governors of the Federal

Reserve System, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, the

Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Farm Credit Association,

and the Federal Housing Finance Agency.

\5\ Conflicts of interest under section 4s(j)(5) of the CEA will

be addressed in a separate rulemaking and the rules pertaining to

conflicts of interest are not included in the following proposed

rules.

\6\ Section 8a(5) of the CEA authorizes the Commission, to

promulgate such regulations as, in the judgement of the Commission,

are reasonably necessary to effectuate any of the provisions or to

accomplish any of the purposes of the CEA.

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The proposed regulations reflect consultation with staff of the

following agencies: (i) The Securities and Exchange Commission; (ii)

the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System; (iii) the Office

of the Comptroller of the Currency; and (iv) the Federal Deposit

Insurance Corporation. Staff from each of these agencies has had the

opportunity to provide oral and/or written comments to the proposal,

and the proposed regulations incorporate elements of the comments

provided.

The Commission requests comment on all aspects of the proposed

regulations, as well as comment on the specific provisions and issues

highlighted in the discussion below. The Commission further requests

comment on an appropriate effective date for final regulations,

including comment on whether it would be appropriate to have staggered

or delayed effective dates for some regulations based on the nature or

characteristics of the activities or entities to which they apply.

Moreover, the Commission recognizes that there will be differences in

the size and scope of the business of particular swap dealers and major

swap participants. Therefore, comments are solicited on whether certain

provisions of the proposed regulations should be modified or adjusted

to reflect the differences among swap dealers or major swap

participants.

II. Proposed Regulations

A. Structure and Approach

The proposed regulations set forth business conduct standards with

which swap dealers and major swap participants must comply. Such duties

[[Page 71399]]

are outlined in section 4s(j) of the CEA and include: (1) Monitoring of

trading; (2) risk management procedures; (3) disclosure of general

information; (4) ability to obtain information; (5) conflicts of

interest; and (6) antitrust considerations. Section 4s(j)(7) requires

the Commission to prescribe rules implementing the enumerated duties.

The proposed regulations will be grouped under a new subpart to

part 23, chapter I, title 17 of the Code of Federal Regulations. The

proposed regulations generally address monitoring of trading and risk

management together in a single rule requiring each swap dealer and

major swap participant to establish a comprehensive risk management

program (rule 23.600). Although part of a comprehensive risk management

program, monitoring of trading for compliance with applicable position

limits (rule 23.601); diligent supervision of a swap dealer's or major

swap participant's business (rule 23.602); and business continuity and

disaster recovery requirements (rule 23.603) are addressed in separate

rules for ease of reference. The availability for disclosure and

inspection of general information (rule 23.606) and antitrust

considerations (rule 23.607) also are addressed in separate rules.

Conflicts of interest under section 4s(j)(5) of the CEA (rule 23.605)

will be addressed in a separate notice of proposed rulemaking to be

released at the same time as this proposal.

B. Risk Management

1. Overview

Sections 4s(h)(1)(D), 4s(h)(3)(D), and 4s(j) of the CEA authorize

the Commission to adopt those regulations regarding business conduct

and risk management that the Commission deems necessary for the public

interest and in furtherance of the CEA. Pursuant to this authority, the

Commission is proposing regulation 23.600 to require swap dealers and

major swap participants to establish a risk management program for

monitoring and managing the risks associated with their business

activities.

The proposed risk management regulation contemplates that each

legal entity that falls within the definition of swap dealer or major

swap participant under the CEA and Commission regulations would be

required to establish a risk management program and risk management

unit. However, the Commission recognizes that the business activities

engaged in and risks faced by one affiliate may increase the risk

exposure or alter overall risk profile of another affiliate or the

entity as a whole, and that, to be effective, a risk management program

must protect against the risks resulting from the activities of

interconnected or otherwise related entities. Accordingly, the proposed

regulations would require each swap dealer and major swap participant

to be able to demonstrate that, to the extent possible, it is taking an

integrated approach to risk management at the consolidated entity

level.

Participants in the swap markets are exposed to various risks,

including, but not limited to: (1) Market risk; \7\ (2) credit risk;

\8\ (3) liquidity risk; \9\ (4) foreign currency risk; \10\ (5) legal

risk; \11\ (6) operational risk; \12\ and (7) settlement risk.\13\

Managing all relevant risks should be integrated into the swap dealer

and major swap participant's overall risk management structure. The

Commission believes this approach is particularly warranted given that

swap dealers and major swap participants may hold positions in a

variety of financial instruments.

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\7\ Market risk includes the risk that prices or rates will

adversely change due to economic forces. This risk includes, among

other things, changes in correlations between or among products

(including all types of basis risk), volatility of market prices,

and the sensitivity of option positions to other market factors.

\8\ Credit risk includes the risk that a counterparty will be

unable to meet fully its financial obligations when due or at any

time in the future.

\9\ Liquidity risk includes the risk that a firm will not be

able to settle its obligations when due and/or without adverse price

changes.

\10\ Foreign currency risk is the risk arising from movements of

foreign exchange rates.

\11\ Legal risk includes risk of loss due to an unenforceable

contract, an ultra vires act of a counterparty, or failure to comply

with applicable law.

\12\ Operational risk includes the risk of loss due to

deficiencies in information systems, internal processes and

staffing, or disruptions from external events that result in the

reduction, deterioration, or breakdown in services or controls

within the firm.

\13\ Settlement risk includes the risk of loss arising when a

party meets its payment obligation under a contract before its

counterparty meets its payment obligation. Settlement risk lasts

from the time an outgoing payment instruction can no longer be

canceled unilaterally until the time the incoming payment is

received with finality and reconciled.

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Some of these risks are due, in part, to the characteristics of

swap products and the way swap markets have evolved over time. For

example, some swaps are customized or designed with unique

characteristics that may present previously unforeseen or unpredictable

risks. Also, for swaps not accepted for clearing, market participants

face risks associated with the financial and legal ability of

counterparties to perform under the terms of specific transactions. As

part of a risk management program, risk managers must carefully review

any unique product characteristics that may pose unusual risks and take

steps to manage potential risks before trading commences.

In the past, the importance of risk management has been highlighted

by significant losses experienced by several large financial firms.

Some of these losses were caused by unauthorized and undisclosed

employee trading. In each case, these losses went virtually undetected

by management because of the lack of proper internal procedures,

including the separation of responsibility for recording the trades on

the firms' books from the personnel responsible for trading. Internal

risk management policies and procedures promote the stability, safety,

and soundness of firms by reducing the risk of significant losses,

which, in turn, may reduce the risk that spreading losses would cause

defaults by multiple firms, thereby undermining markets as a whole.

The Commission recognizes that an individual firm must have the

flexibility to implement specific policies and procedures unique to its

circumstances. The Commission's rule has been designed such that the

specific elements of a risk management program will vary depending on

the size and complexity of a swap dealer's or major swap participant's

business operations. Risk management policies are expected to provide

for appropriate risk measurement methodologies, compliance monitoring

and reporting, and on-going testing and assessment of the overall

effectiveness of the program. Consequently, proposed regulations

23.600, 23.601, 23.602, and 23.603 would establish the general

parameters for the design, implementation, review, and testing of a

swap dealer's or major swap participant's risk management program, as

well as a limited number of additional elements that the Commission

believes are essential to an appropriate risk management program.

The proposed rules would require a swap dealer or major swap

participant to adopt policies and procedures to monitor and manage its

risks, assess the effectiveness of those policies and procedures, and

modify or update them, as necessary, from time to time. In addition,

the proposed rule would require certain elements to be included in each

swap dealer and major swap participant's risk management program to

ensure that internal systems protect against universal risks. For

example, to ensure the independence of the risk management process, the

unit at the firm responsible for monitoring risk must be independent

from the business trading unit whose activities create the risks. In

addition, to ensure that trading

[[Page 71400]]

losses cannot be hidden, personnel responsible for recording

transactions in the books of the swap dealer or major swap participant

cannot be the same as those responsible for executing transactions.

Similarly, all accounts, including suspense accounts, must be

monitored.

Finally, the swap dealer's or major swap participant's management

must periodically review the firm's business activities for consistency

with established risk management policies. This will ensure that

personnel are operating within the scope of activity that management

has determined to be permissible.

2. Risk Management Program

Proposed regulation 23.600(b) provides a general requirement that a

swap dealer or major swap participant establish and maintain a risk

management program reasonably designed to monitor and manage the risks

associated with its business as a swap dealer or major swap

participant. It further provides (1) That such risk management program

consist of written policies and procedures; (2) that such policies and

procedures be approved by the governing body of the swap dealer or

major swap participant and be furnished to the Commission; and (3) that

a risk management unit that is independent from the business trading

unit be established to administer the risk management program.

The proposed regulations would require swap dealers and major swap

participants to provide copies of the risk management policies and

procedures to the Commission in order to allow the Commission to

monitor the status of risk management practices among swap dealers and

major swap participants. Submission of such policies and procedures to

the Commission without further comment or action by the Commission or

Commission staff should not be construed as an endorsement of the

completeness or effectiveness of the risk management policies and

procedures and no swap dealer or major swap participant should make a

representation to the contrary. The Commission invites comments on the

submission of risk management policies and procedures and, more

generally, on whether the provisions of 23.600 have achieved a

sufficient level of detail for the purposes of designing a

comprehensive risk management program.

Proposed regulation 23.600(c) would provide a non-exclusive list of

the elements that must be a part of the risk management program of a

swap dealer or major swap participant. Such policies and procedures

should include: (1) Identifying risks and setting of risk tolerance

limits; (2) providing periodic risk exposure reports to senior

management and the governing body; (3) establishing a new product

policy; and (4) establishing a risk management program that takes into

account market risk, credit risk, liquidity risk, foreign currency

risk, legal risk, operational risk, and settlement risk, including a

process for evaluating and addressing risks associated with the use of

models to derive market valuations or otherwise calculate or evaluate

risk exposures. The regulation also would establish requirements for

supervision of the business unit of a swap dealer or major swap

participant, including monitoring of limits on individual traders and

establishing procedures governing the use, supervision, and testing of

any algorithmic trading program. The objective is to ensure that those

capable of committing the capital of the swap dealer or major swap

participant are properly supervised and subject to approved limits.

Additionally, the risk management program should set forth requirements

for compliance with Commission regulations related to capital and

margin and for monitoring overall compliance with the risk management

program. The rule also would require that swap dealers and major swap

participants establish policies and procedures (1) to require the use

of central counterparties for clearing where clearing is required

pursuant to Commission regulation or order, and (2) to use central

clearing as a means of mitigating counterparty credit risk.

To ensure the continued effectiveness of a risk management program,

proposed regulation 23.600(e) would require quarterly review and

testing of the adequacy of each swap dealer and major swap

participant's risk management program by internal audit staff or a

qualified external, third party service. The Commission requests

comment on these proposed audit and review requirements.

C. Monitoring of Position Limits

Proposed regulation 23.601 would require swap dealers and major

swap participants to establish policies and procedures to monitor,

detect, and prevent violations of applicable position limits

established by the Commission, a designated contract market, or a swap

execution facility. This rule implements section 4s(j)(1) of the CEA,

which requires each swap dealer and major swap participant to monitor

its trading in swaps to prevent violations of applicable position

limits. In order to prevent violations, each swap dealer and major swap

participant would be required to provide training to all relevant

employees on applicable position limits, actively monitor trading,

implement an early warning system, test the effectiveness of its

policies and procedures, and report quarterly to its senior management

and governing body on compliance with applicable position limits. The

Commission requests comment on how much time would be needed for swap

dealers and major swap participants to come into compliance with new

position limits that may be imposed.

D. Diligent Supervision

Proposed regulation 23.602 implements section 4s(h)(1)(B) of the

CEA, which requires each swap dealer and major swap participant to

conform with Commission regulations related to diligent supervision of

the business of the swap dealer and major swap participant. The

proposed regulation provides (1) a requirement for diligent supervision

reasonably designed to achieve compliance with the CEA and Commission

regulations, and (2) requirements for qualification of supervisors and

grants of appropriate supervisory authority.

E. Business Continuity and Disaster Recovery

Given the observed interconnectedness of the current swap market,

and as part of a comprehensive risk management program, the Commission

believes that each swap dealer and major swap participant should be

required to establish and maintain a business continuity and disaster

recovery plan that is reasonably designed to minimize any disruption to

the financial markets in the event of an emergency or a disruption of a

swap dealer's or major swap participant's business operations. Proposed

regulation 23.603 would require swap dealers and major swap

participants to establish and maintain a business continuity and

disaster recovery plan designed to enable the swap dealer or major swap

participant to resume normal operations within one business day of an

emergency or other disruption.

To accomplish this task, swap dealers and major swap participants

would be required to provide the Commission with emergency contacts;

identify essential documents, data, facilities, infrastructure, and

personnel, and maintain sufficient back-up facilities in a reasonably

separate geographic location; design a plan for communicating with

persons essential

[[Page 71401]]

for recovery; and annually test the business continuity and disaster

recovery plan's effectiveness.

The Commission invites comments regarding whether a comprehensive

business continuity and disaster recovery plan is necessary for all

entities that may register with the Commission as swap dealers or major

swap participants and whether one business day is sufficient time for

recovery of essential business operations. The Commission also invites

comments regarding an appropriate effective date for this regulation

given the amount of time and cost that may be necessary for

implementation of a comprehensive business continuity and disaster

recovery plan.

F. Disclosure and Ability To Obtain Information

In order to carry out its oversight and examination

responsibilities, the Commission would require access to certain

information of swap dealers and major swap participants.\14\ Sections

4s(j)(3) and 4s(j)(4) of the CEA require a swap dealer or major swap

participant to (1) disclose to the Commission and to the swap dealer's

or major swap participant's prudential regulator information regarding

the terms and conditions of its swaps, its swap trading operations,

mechanisms, and practices; its financial integrity protections relating

to swaps, and other information relevant to its trading in swaps; and

(2) establish internal systems to obtain necessary information to

perform any of the functions described in section 4s and for disclosure

of information to the Commission or prudential regulator upon request.

Proposed regulation 23.606 would implement these requirements.

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\14\ The oversight, supervision, and examination regimes for

swap dealers and major swap participants remain under consideration

by the Commission. The Commission is considering whether it will

directly handle oversight, whether it may delegate authority to

perform oversight to one or more self-regulatory organizations

(SROs), or whether a combination of Commission and SRO oversight

would be the optimal approach.

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Proposed regulation 23.606(a) requires that swap dealers and major

swap participants make available for disclosure and inspection all

information required by the Commission, including those items listed in

section 4s(j)(3). This information would be required to be disclosed

promptly to the Commission or applicable prudential regulator in the

manner and frequency as set forth in the relevant regulation. Proposed

regulation 23.606(b) would require a swap dealer or major swap

participant to establish and maintain adequate internal systems that

will permit it to obtain any information required to satisfy its duties

under section 4s(j) of the CEA.

G. Antitrust Considerations

Section 4s(j)(6) of the CEA prohibits a swap dealer or major swap

participant from adopting any process or taking any action that results

in any unreasonable restraint of trade or imposes any material

anticompetitive burden on trading or clearing, unless necessary or

appropriate to achieve the purposes of the CEA. Proposed regulation

23.607 would implement these prohibitions by requiring that the swap

dealer or major swap participant adopt policies and procedures that

would prevent unreasonable restraint of trade or the imposition of a

material anticompetitive burden on trading or clearing.

III. Related Matters

A. Regulatory Flexibility Act

The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) requires that agencies

consider whether the rules they propose will have a significant

economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.\15\ The

Commission previously has established certain definitions of ``small

entities'' to be used by the Commission in evaluating the impact of its

regulations on small entities in accordance with the RFA.\16\ The

proposed rules would affect swap dealers and major swap participants.

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\15\ 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.

\16\ 47 FR 18618, Apr. 30, 1982.

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Swap dealers and major swap participants are new categories of

registrants. Accordingly, the Commission has not previously addressed

the question of whether such persons are, in fact, small entities for

purposes of the RFA. However, the Commission previously has determined

that futures commission merchants should not be considered to be small

entities for purposes of the RFA.\17\ The Commission's determination

was based, in part, upon the obligation of futures commission merchants

to meet the minimum financial requirements established by the

Commission to enhance the protection of customers' segregated funds and

protect the financial condition of futures commission merchants

generally.\18\ Like futures commission merchants, swap dealers will be

subject to minimum capital and margin requirements and are expected to

comprise the largest global financial firms. The Commission is required

to exempt from swap dealer designation any entities that engage in a de

minimis level of swaps dealing in connection with transactions with or

on behalf of customers. The Commission anticipates that this exemption

would tend to exclude small entities from registration. Accordingly,

for purposes of the RFA for this rulemaking, the Commission is hereby

proposing that swap dealers not be considered ``small entities'' for

essentially the same reasons that futures commission merchants have

previously been determined not to be small entities and in light of the

exemption from the definition of swap dealer for those engaging in a de

minimis level of swap dealing.

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\17\ Id. at 18619.

\18\ Id.

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The Commission has also previously determined that large traders

are not ``small entities'' for RFA purposes.\19\ In that determination,

the Commission considered that a large trading position was indicative

of the size of the business. Major swap participants, by statutory

definition, maintain substantial positions in swaps or maintain

outstanding swap positions that create substantial counterparty

exposure that could have serious adverse effects on the financial

stability of the United States banking system or financial markets.

Accordingly, for purposes of the RFA for this rulemaking, the

Commission is hereby proposing that major swap participants not be

considered ``small entities'' for essentially the same reasons that

large traders have previously been determined not to be small entities.

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\19\ Id. at 18620.

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Moreover, the Commission is carrying out Congressional mandates by

proposing this regulation. Specifically, the Commission is proposing

these regulations to comply with the Dodd-Frank Act, the aim of which

is to reduce systemic risks presented by swap dealers and swap market

participants through comprehensive regulation. The Commission does not

believe that there are regulatory alternatives to those being proposed

that would be consistent with the statutory mandate. Accordingly, the

Chairman, on behalf of the Commission, hereby certifies pursuant to 5

U.S.C. 605(b) that the proposed rules will not have a significant

economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.

B. Paperwork Reduction Act

The Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) \20\ imposes certain requirements

on Federal agencies in connection with their conducting or sponsoring

any collection of information as defined by the PRA. This proposed

rulemaking would result in new collection of

[[Page 71402]]

information requirements within the meaning of the PRA. The Commission

therefore is submitting this proposal to the Office of Management and

Budget (OMB) for review in accordance with 44 U.S.C. 3507(d) and 5 CFR

1320.11. The title for this collection of information is ``Regulations

Establishing and Governing the Duties of Swap Dealers and Major Swap

Participants.'' The OMB has not yet assigned this collection a control

number. An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not

required to respond to, a collection of information unless it displays

a currently valid control number.

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\20\ 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.

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The collection of information under these proposed rules is

necessary to implement certain provisions of the CEA, as amended by the

Dodd-Frank Act. Specifically, it is essential to ensuring that swap

dealers and major swap participants maintain risk management programs,

business continuity and disaster recovery plans, procedures to ensure

compliance with position limits, and antitrust procedures. Commission

staff would use the information when conducting the Commission's

examination and oversight program to evaluate the completeness and

effectiveness of the procedures adopted by the registrants.

If the proposed regulations are adopted, responses to this

collection of information would be mandatory. The Commission will

protect proprietary information according to the Freedom of Information

Act and 17 CFR part 145, ``Commission Records and Information.'' In

addition, section 8(a)(1) of the CEA strictly prohibits the Commission,

unless specifically authorized by the CEA, from making public ``data

and information that would separately disclose the business

transactions or market positions of any person and trade secrets or

names of customers.'' The Commission is also required to protect

certain information contained in a government system of records

according to the Privacy Act of 1974, 5 U.S.C. 552a.

1. Information Provided by Reporting Entities/Persons

The proposed regulation would require each swap dealer and major

swap participant to establish a risk management program (including

specific policies for compliance with position limits and to ensure

business continuity and disaster recovery); establish policies to

prevent unreasonable restraints of trade and anticompetitive burdens;

establish systems to diligently supervise the activities relating to

its business; and make certain information available for disclosure and

inspection by the Commission. These requirements may impose PRA

burdens. The burden associated with the proposed regulation per

registrant is estimated to be 204.5 hours per year, at an annual cost

of $20,450. For purposes of the PRA, the term ``burden'' means the

``time, effort, or financial resources expended by persons to generate,

maintain, or provide information to or for a Federal Agency.'' \21\

This burden will result from the development of the required policies

and procedures, satisfaction of various reporting obligations and the

documentation of required testing.

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\21\ 44 U.S.C. 3502(2).

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It is not currently known how many swap dealers and major swap

participants will become subject to these rules, and this will not be

known to the Commission until the registration requirements for these

entities become effective after July 16, 2011, the date on which the

Dodd-Frank Act becomes effective. While the Commission believes that

there may likely be approximately 200 swap dealers and 50 major swap

participants, it has taken a conservative approach, for PRA purposes,

in estimating that there will be a combined number of 300 swap dealers

and major swap participants who will be required to establish and

implement risk management policies and procedures under the proposed

rules. The Commission estimated the number of affected entities based

on industry data.

According to recent Bureau of Labor Statistics, the mean hourly

wage of an employee under occupation code 11-3031, ``Financial

Managers,'' (which includes financial risk managers) that is employed

by the ``Securities and Commodity Contracts Intermediation and

Brokerage'' industry is $74.41.\22\ Because swap dealers and major swap

participants include large financial institutions whose risk management

employees' salaries may exceed the mean wage, the Commission has

estimated the cost burden of these proposed regulations based upon an

average salary of $100 per hour. Accordingly, the estimated burden was

calculated as follows:

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\22\ http://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes113031.htm.

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Drafting, Filing, Updating and Distributing Risk Management Program

(Including Position Limit Procedures and Business Continuity and

Disaster Recovery Plan)

Number of registrants: 300.

Estimated number of responses: 300.

Estimated total annual burden per registrant: 160 hours.

Frequency of collection: One-time filing with the Commission,

annual distribution, updating as needed.

Total annual burden: 48,000 burden hours [300 registrants x 160

hours].

Quarterly Risk Exposure Reports

Number of registrants: 300.

Estimated number of responses: 1,200 [300 registrants x 4 reports].

Estimated total annual burden per registrant: 32 hours.

Frequency of collection: Quarterly.

Total annual burden: 9,600 burden hours [300 registrants x 32

hours].

Quarterly Documentation of Risk Management Testing

Number of registrants: 300.

Estimated number of responses: 1,200 [300 registrants x 4 tests].

Estimated total annual burden per registrant: 4 hours.

Frequency of collection: Quarterly.

Total annual burden: 1,200 hours [300 registrants x 4 hours].

Documentation of Annual Position Limit Compliance Training and Audit

Number of registrants: 300.

Estimated number of responses: 300.

Estimated total annual burden per registrant: 2 hours.

Frequency of collection: Annually.

Total annual burden: 600 hours [300 registrants x 2 hours].

Quarterly Documentation of Position Limit Compliance

Number of registrants: 300.

Estimated number of responses: 1,200 [300 registrants x 4 reports].

Estimated total annual burden per registrant: 2 hours.

Frequency of collection: Quarterly.

Total annual burden: 600 hours [300 registrants x 2 hours].

Documentation of Position Limit Violations

Number of registrants: 300.

Estimated number of responses: 600 [300 registrants x 2 documents].

Estimated total annual burden per registrant: .5.

Frequency of collection: As needed.

Total annual burden: 150 hours [300 registrants x .5 hours].

Filing Emergency Contact Information and Annual Documentation of

Business Continuity Testing

Number of registrants: 300.

Estimated number of responses: 300.

Estimated total annual burden per registrant: 1 hour.

Frequency of collection: Annual.

Total annual burden: 300 hours.

[[Page 71403]]

Documentation of Risk Assessment of New Products

Number of registrants: 300.

Estimated number of responses: 1,500 [300 registrants x 5

documents].

Estimated total annual burden per registrant: 3 hours.

Frequency of collection: As needed.

Total annual burden: 900 hours [300 registrants x 3 hours].

Based upon the above, the aggregate cost for all registrants is

61,350 burden hours and $6,135,000 [61,350 x $100 per hour].

2. Information Collection Comments

The Commission invites the public and other federal agencies to

comment on any aspect of the reporting and recordkeeping burdens

discussed above. Pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(2)(B), the Commission

solicits comments in order to: (i) Evaluate whether the proposed

collection of information is necessary for the proper performance of

the functions of the Commission, including whether the information will

have practical utility; (ii) evaluate the accuracy of the Commission's

estimate of the burden of the proposed collection of information; (iii)

determine whether there are ways to enhance the quality, utility, and

clarity of the information to be collected; and (iv) minimize the

burden of the collection of information on those who are to respond,

including through the use of automated collection techniques or other

forms of information technology.

Comments may be submitted directly to the Office of Information and

Regulatory Affairs, by fax at (202) 395-6566 or by e-mail at

[email protected]. Please provide the Commission with a copy

of submitted comments so that all comments can be summarized and

addressed in the final rule preamble. Refer to the Addresses section of

this notice of proposed rulemaking for comment submission instructions

to the Commission. A copy of the supporting statements for the

collections of information discussed above may be obtained by visiting

http://www.RegInfo.gov. OMB is required to make a decision concerning

the collection of information between 30 and 60 days after publication

of this document in the Federal Register. Therefore, a comment is best

assured of having its full effect if OMB (and the Commission) receives

it within 30 days of publication.

C. Cost-Benefit Analysis

Section 15(a) of the CEA \23\ requires the Commission to consider

the costs and benefits of its actions before issuing a rulemaking under

the CEA. By its terms, Section 15(a) does not require the Commission to

quantify the costs and benefits of a new regulation or to determine

whether the benefits of the rule outweigh its costs; rather, it

requires that the Commission ``consider'' the costs and benefits of its

actions.

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\23\ 7 U.S.C. 19(a).

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Section 15(a) further specifies that costs and benefits of a

proposed rulemaking shall be evaluated in light of five broad areas of

market and public concern: (1) Protection of market participants and

the public; (2) efficiency, competitiveness, and financial integrity of

futures markets; (3) price discovery; (4) sound risk management

practices; and (5) other public interest considerations. The Commission

may, in its discretion, give greater weight to any one of the five

enumerated considerations and could, in its discretion, determine that,

notwithstanding its costs, a particular regulation was necessary or

appropriate to protect the public interest or to effectuate any of the

provisions or to accomplish any of the purposes of the CEA.

Summary of proposed requirements. The proposed regulations would

implement certain provisions of section 731 of the Dodd-Frank Act,

which adds a new section 4s(j) to the Commodity Exchange Act. The

proposed regulations would set forth certain duties imposed upon swap

dealers and major swap participants registered with the Commission with

regard to: (1) Risk management procedures; (2) monitoring of trading to

prevent violations of applicable position limits; (3) diligent

supervision; (4) business continuity and disaster recovery; (5)

disclosure and the ability of regulators to obtain general information;

and (6) antitrust considerations.

Costs. With respect to costs, the Commission has determined that

for swap dealers and major swap participants, costs to institute risk

management systems and personnel in order to satisfy the new regulatory

requirements are far outweighed by the benefits to the financial system

as a whole. The proposed rules would require a swap dealer or major

swap participant to consider a number of issues affecting its business

environment when creating its risk management system. For example, a

swap dealer or major swap participant would need to consider, among

other things, the experience and qualifications of relevant risk

management personnel, as well as the separation of duties among

personnel in the business unit, when designing and implementing its

risk management policies and procedures. These considerations would

help facilitate the development of a risk management program that

appropriately addresses the risks posed by the swap dealer's or major

swap participant's business and the environment in which such business

is being conducted. In addition, these considerations would guide a

swap dealer or major swap participant in the implementation of specific

policies and procedures unique to its circumstances.

It is estimated that the average amount of time a swap dealer or

major swap participant would spend annually implementing its

comprehensive risk management program would be 204.5 hours. Based on an

hourly wage rate of $100, Commission staff estimates that each

registrant could expend up to $20,450 annually to comply with the

proposed rules. This would result in an aggregated cost of $6,135,000

annually (300 registrants x $20,450).

Most swap dealers and major swap participants have adequate

resources and existing risk management structures that are capable of

adjusting to the new regulatory framework without material diversion of

resources away from commercial operations.

Benefits. With respect to benefits, the proposed regulations would

require swap dealers and major swap participants to assess and monitor

the adequacy of their risk management under standards established by

the Commission. This would further the goal of avoiding market

disruptions and financial losses to market participants and the general

public. The proposed regulations also would promote prudent risk

management, oversight and stability, thereby fostering efficiency and a

greater ability to compete in the broader financial markets. The

proposed regulations would reward efficiency insofar as swap dealers

and major swap participants that operate efficiently would have lower

operating costs and thus would require fewer resources to comply with

the regulations. Finally, the proposed regulations are designed to

ensure that swap dealers and major swap participants can sustain their

market operations and meet their financial obligations to market

participants, thus contributing to the integrity of the financial

markets. Therefore, the Commission believes it is prudent to require

risk management

[[Page 71404]]

requirements for swap dealers and major swap participants.

Public Comment. The Commission invites public comment on its cost-

benefit considerations. Commenters are also invited to submit any data

or other information that they may have quantifying or qualifying the

costs and benefits of the proposed rules with their comment letters.

List of Subjects in 17 CFR Part 23

Antitrust, Commodity futures, Conduct standards, Conflict of

interests, Major swap participants, Reporting and recordkeeping, Swap

dealers, Swaps.

For the reasons stated in this release, the Commission proposes to

amend 17 CFR part 23 (as proposed in a separate proposed rule published

elsewhere in this issue of the Federal Register) as follows:

PART 23--SWAP DEALERS AND MAJOR SWAP PARTICIPANTS

Authority and Issuance

1. The authority citation for part 23 continues to read as follows:

Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1a, 2, 6, 6a, 6b, 6b-1, 6c, 6p, 6r, 6s, 6t,

9, 9a, 12, 12a, 13b, 13c, 16a, 18, 19, 21.

2. Subpart J is added to read as follows:

Subpart J--Duties of Swap Dealers and Major Swap Participants

Sec.

23.600 Risk Management Program for swap dealers and major swap

participants.

23.601 Monitoring of position limits.

23.602 Diligent supervision.

23.603 Business continuity and disaster recovery.

23.604 [Reserved]

23.605 [Reserved]

23.606 General information: Availability for disclosure and

inspection.

23.607 Antitrust considerations.

Subpart J--Duties of Swap Dealers and Major Swap Participants

Sec. 23.600 Risk Management Program for swap dealers and major swap

participants.

(a) Definitions. For purposes of this subpart J, the following

terms shall be defined as provided.

(1) Affiliate. This term means, with respect to any person, a

person controlling, controlled by, or under common control with, such

person.

(2) Business trading unit. This term means any department,

division, group, or personnel of a swap dealer or major swap

participant or any of its affiliates, whether or not identified as

such, that performs or is involved in any pricing, trading, sales,

marketing, advertising, solicitation, structuring, or brokerage

activities on behalf of a registrant.

(3) Clearing unit. This term means any department, division, group,

or personnel of a registrant or any of its affiliates, whether or not

identified as such, that performs any proprietary or customer clearing

activities on behalf of a registrant.

(4) Governing body. This term typically means, with respect to:

(i) A sole proprietorship, the proprietor;

(ii) A corporation, its board of directors;

(iii) A partnership, any general partner;

(iv) A limited liability company or limited liability partnership,

the manager, managing member or those members vested with management

authority; or

(v) Any other person, the body or person with ultimate decision-

making authority over the activities of such person.

(5) Prudential regulator. This term has the same meaning as section

1a(39) of the Commodity Exchange Act and includes the Board of

Governors of the Federal Reserve System, the Office of the Comptroller

of the Currency, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Farm

Credit Association, and the Federal Housing Finance Agency, as

applicable to the swap dealer or major swap participant. The term also

includes the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, with respect to any

financial company as defined in section 201 of under the Dodd-Frank

Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act or any insured

depository institution under the Federal Deposit Insurance Act, and

with respect to each affiliate of any such company or institution.

(6) Senior management. This term means, with respect to a

registrant, such registrant's chief executive officer and any officer

with supervisory duties who reports directly to the chief executive

officer.

(b) Risk management program. (1) Purpose. Each swap dealer and

major swap participant shall establish, document, maintain, and enforce

a system of risk management policies and procedures designed to monitor

and manage the risks associated with the business of the swap dealer or

major swap participant. For purposes of this regulation, such policies

and procedures shall be referred to collectively as a ``Risk Management

Program.''

(2) Written policies and procedures. Each swap dealer and major

swap participant shall maintain written policies and procedures that

describe the Risk Management Program of the swap dealer or major swap

participant.

(3) Approval by governing body. The Risk Management Program and the

written risk management policies and procedures shall be approved, in

writing, by the governing body of the swap dealer or major swap

participant.

(4) Furnishing to the Commission. Each swap dealer and major swap

participant shall furnish a copy of its written risk management

policies and procedures to the Commission upon application for

registration. Where there is a material change in the risk management

policies and procedures, updated risk management policies and

procedures reflecting that change shall be furnished to the Commission

within sixty (60) calendar days after the end of the fiscal quarter in

which the change occurred.

(5) Risk management unit. As part of its Risk Management Program,

each swap dealer and major swap participant shall establish and

maintain a risk management unit with sufficient authority; qualified

personnel; and financial, operational, and other resources to carry out

the risk management program established pursuant to this regulation.

The risk management unit shall report directly to senior management and

shall be independent from the business trading unit.

(c) Elements of the Risk Management Program. The Risk Management

Program of each swap dealer and major swap participant shall include,

at a minimum, the following elements:

(1) Identification of risks and risk tolerance limits. (i) The Risk

Management Program should take into account market, credit, liquidity,

foreign currency, legal, operational, settlement, and any other

applicable risks together with a description of the risk tolerance

limits set by the swap dealer or major swap participant and the

underlying methodology. The risk tolerance limits shall be reviewed and

approved quarterly by senior management and annually by the governing

body. Exceptions to risk tolerance limits shall require prior approval

of, at a minimum, a supervisor in the risk management unit.

(ii) The Risk Management Program shall take into account risks

posed by affiliates and take an integrated approach to risk management

at the consolidated entity level.

(iii) The Risk Management Program shall include policies and

procedures for detecting breaches of risk tolerance limits set by the

swap dealer or major swap participant, and alerting supervisors within

the risk management unit and senior management, as appropriate.

[[Page 71405]]

(2) Periodic Risk Exposure Reports. (i) The risk management unit of

each swap dealer and major swap participant shall provide to senior

management and to its governing body quarterly written reports setting

forth the market, credit, liquidity, foreign currency, legal,

operational, settlement, and any other applicable risk exposures of the

swap dealer or major swap participant; any recommended changes to the

Risk Management Program; the recommended time frame for implementing

those changes; and the status of any incomplete implementation of

previously recommended changes to the Risk Management Program. For

purposes of this regulation, such reports shall be referred to as

``Risk Exposure Reports.'' The Risk Exposure Reports also shall be

provided to the senior management and the governing body immediately

upon detection of any material change in the risk exposure of the swap

dealer or major swap participant.

(ii) Furnishing to the Commission. Each swap dealer and major swap

participant shall furnish copies of its Risk Exposure Reports to the

Commission within five (5) business days of providing such reports to

its senior management.

(3) New product policy. The Risk Management Program of each swap

dealer and major swap participant shall include a new product policy

that is designed to identify and take into account the risks of any new

product prior to engaging in transactions involving the new product.

The new product policy should include the following elements:

(i) Consideration of the type of counterparty with which the new

product will be transacted; the product's characteristics and economic

function; and whether the product requires a novel pricing methodology

or presents novel legal and regulatory issues.

(ii) Identification and analysis of the relevant risks of the new

product and how they will be managed. The risk analysis should include

an assessment of any product, market, credit, liquidity, foreign

currency, legal, operational, settlement, and any other risks

associated with the new product. Product risk characteristics may

include, but are not limited to, volatility, non-linear price

characteristics, jump-to-default risk, and any correlation between the

value of the product and the counterparty's creditworthiness.

(iii) An assessment, signed by a supervisor in the risk management

unit, as to whether the new product would materially alter the overall

entity-wide risk profile of the swap dealer or major swap participant.

If the new product would materially alter the overall risk profile of

the swap dealer or major swap participant, the new product must be pre-

approved by the governing body before any transactions are effectuated.

(iv) A requirement that the risk management unit review the risk

analysis to identify any necessary modifications to the Risk Management

Program and implement such modifications prior to engaging in

transactions involving the new product.

(4) Specific risk management considerations. The Risk Management

Program of each swap dealer and major swap participant shall include,

but not be limited to, policies and procedures necessary to monitor and

manage the following risks:

(i) Market risk. Market risk policies and procedures shall take

into account, among other things:

(A) Daily measurement of market exposure, including exposure due to

unique product characteristics, volatility of prices, basis and

correlation risks, leverage, sensitivity of option positions, and

position concentration, to comply with market risk tolerance limits;

(B) Timely and reliable valuation data derived from, or verified

by, sources that are independent of the business trading unit, and if

derived from pricing models, that the models have been independently

validated by qualified, independent persons; and

(C) Reconciliation of profits and losses resulting from valuations

with the general ledger at least once each business day.

(ii) Credit risk. Credit risk policies and procedures shall take

into account, among other things:

(A) Daily measurement of overall credit exposure to comply with

counterparty credit limits;

(B) Monitoring and reporting of violations of counterparty credit

limits performed by personnel that are independent of the business

trading unit; and

(C) Regular valuation of collateral used to cover credit exposures

and safeguarding of collateral to prevent loss, disposal,

rehypothecation, or use unless appropriately authorized.

(iii) Liquidity risk. Liquidity risk policies and procedures shall

take into account, among other things:

(A) Daily measurement of liquidity needs;

(B) Testing of procedures to liquidate all non-cash collateral in a

timely manner and without significant effect on price; and

(C) Application of appropriate collateral haircuts that accurately

reflect market and credit risk.

(iv) Foreign currency risk. Foreign currency risk policies and

procedures shall take into account, among other things:

(A) Daily measurement of the amount of capital exposed to

fluctuations in the value of foreign currency to comply with applicable

limits; and

(B) Establishment of safeguards against adverse currency

fluctuations.

(v) Legal risk. Legal risk policies and procedures shall take into

account, among other things:

(A) Determinations that transactions and netting arrangements

entered into have a sound legal basis; and

(B) Establishment of documentation tracking procedures designed to

ensure the completeness of relevant documentation and to resolve any

documentation exceptions on a timely basis.

(vi) Operational risk. Operational risk policies and procedures

shall take into account, among other things:

(A) Secure and reliable operating and information systems with

adequate, scalable capacity, and independence from the business trading

unit;

(B) Safeguards to detect, identify, and promptly correct

deficiencies in operating and information systems; and

(C) Reconciliation of all operating and information systems.

(vii) Settlement risk. Settlement risk policies and procedures

shall take into account, among other things:

(A) Establishment of standard settlement instructions with each

counterparty;

(B) Procedures to track outstanding settlement items and aging

information in all accounts, including nostro and suspense accounts;

and

(C) Procedures to ensure timely payments to counterparties and to

resolve any late payments.

(5) Use of central counterparties. Each swap dealer and major swap

participant shall establish policies and procedures relating to its use

of central counterparties. Such policies and procedures shall:

(i) Require the use of central counterparties where clearing is

required pursuant to Commission regulation or order, unless the

counterparty has properly invoked a clearing exemption under Commission

regulations;

(ii) Set forth the conditions for use of central counterparties for

clearing when available as a means of mitigating counterparty credit

risk; and

(iii) Require diligent investigation into the adequacy of the

financial resources

[[Page 71406]]

and risk management procedures of any central counterparty through

which the swap dealer or major swap participant clears.

(6) Compliance with margin and capital requirements. Each swap

dealer and major swap participant shall satisfy all capital and margin

requirements established by the Commission or prudential regulator, as

applicable.

(7) Monitoring of compliance with Risk Management Program. Each

swap dealer and major swap participant shall establish policies and

procedures to detect violations of the Risk Management Program; to

encourage employees to report such violations to senior management,

without fear of retaliation; and to take specified disciplinary action

against employees who violate the Risk Management Program.

(d) Business trading unit. Each swap dealer and major swap

participant shall establish policies and procedures that, at a minimum:

(1) Require all trading policies be approved by the governing body

of the swap dealer or major swap participant;

(2) Require that traders execute transactions only with

counterparties for whom credit limits have been established;

(3) Provide specific quantitative or qualitative limits for traders

and personnel able to commit the capital of the swap dealer or major

swap participant;

(4) Monitor each trader throughout the trading day to prevent the

trader from exceeding any limit to which the trader is subject, or from

otherwise incurring undue risk;

(5) Require each trader to follow established policies and

procedures for executing and confirming all transactions;

(6) Establish means to detect unauthorized trading activities or

any other violation of policies and procedures;

(7) Ensure that trade discrepancies are brought to the immediate

attention of management of the business trading unit and are

documented;

(8) Ensure that the risk management unit reviews brokers'

statements, reconciles brokers' charges to estimates, reviews and

monitors broker's commissions, and initiates payment to brokers;

(9) Ensure that use of algorithmic trading programs is subject to

policies and procedures governing the use, supervision, maintenance,

testing, and inspection of the program; and

(10) Require the separation of personnel in the business trading

unit from personnel in the risk management unit.

(e) Review and testing. (1) Risk Management Programs shall be

reviewed and tested on at least a quarterly basis, or upon any material

change in the business of the swap dealer or major swap participant

that is reasonably likely to alter the risk profile of the swap dealer

or major swap participant.

(2) The quarterly reviews of the Risk Management Program shall

include an analysis of adherence to, and the effectiveness of, the risk

management policies and procedures, and any recommendations for

modifications to the Risk Management Program. The quarterly testing

shall be performed by qualified internal audit staff that are

independent of the business trading unit being audited or by a

qualified third party audit service reporting to staff that are

independent of the business trading unit. The results of the quarterly

reviews of the Risk Management Program shall be promptly reported to

and reviewed by, the chief compliance officer, senior management, and

governing body of the swap dealer or major swap participant.

(3) Each swap dealer and major swap participant shall document all

internal and external reviews and testing of its Risk Management

Program and written risk management policies and procedures including

the date of the review or test; the results; any deficiencies

identified; the corrective action taken; and the date that corrective

action was taken. Such documentation shall be provided to Commission

staff, upon request.

(f) Distribution of risk management policies and procedures. The

Risk Management Program shall include procedures for the timely

distribution of its written risk management policies and procedures to

relevant supervisory personnel. Each swap dealer and major swap

participant shall maintain records of the persons to whom the risk

management policies and procedures were distributed and when they were

distributed.

(g) Recordkeeping. (1) Each swap dealer and major swap participant

shall maintain copies of all written approvals required by this

section.

(2) All records or reports that a swap dealer or major swap

participant is required to maintain pursuant to this regulation shall

be maintained in accordance with 17 CFR 1.31 and shall be made

available promptly upon request to representatives of the Commission

and to representatives of applicable prudential regulators.

Sec. 23.601 Monitoring of position limits.

(a) Each swap dealer and major swap participant shall establish and

enforce written policies and procedures that are designed to monitor

for and prevent violations of applicable position limits established by

the Commission, a designated contract market, or a swap execution

facility, and to monitor for and prevent improper reliance upon any

exemptions or exclusions from such position limits. For purposes of

this regulation, such policies and procedures shall be referred to as

``Position Limit Procedures.'' The Position Limit Procedures shall be

incorporated into the Risk Management Program of the swap dealer or

major swap participant.

(b) For purposes of the Position Limit Procedures, each swap dealer

and major swap participant shall convert all swap positions into

equivalent futures positions using the methodology set forth in

Commission regulations.

(c) Each swap dealer and major swap participant shall provide

training to all relevant personnel on applicable position limits on an

annual basis and promptly upon any change to applicable position

limits. Each swap dealer and major swap participant shall maintain

records of such training including the substance of the training and

the identity of those receiving training.

(d) Each swap dealer and major swap participant shall diligently

monitor its trading activities and diligently supervise the actions of

its partners, officers, employees, and agents to ensure compliance with

the Position Limit Procedures of the swap dealer or major swap

participant.

(e) The Position Limit Procedures of each swap dealer and major

swap participant shall implement an early warning system designed to

detect and alert its senior management when position limits are in

danger of being breached (such as when trading has reached a percentage

threshold of the applicable position limit, and when position limits

have been exceeded). Any detected violation of applicable position

limits shall be reported promptly to the firm's governing body and to

the Commission. Each swap dealer and major swap participant shall

maintain a record of any early warning received, any position limit

violation detected, any action taken as a result of either, and the

date action was taken.

(f) Each swap dealer and major swap participant shall test its

Position Limit Procedures for adequacy and effectiveness each month and

maintain records of such monthly tests; the results thereof; any action

that is taken as a result thereof including, without limitation, any

recommendations for

[[Page 71407]]

modifications to the firm's Position Limit Procedures; and the date

action was taken.

(g) Each swap dealer and major swap participant shall document its

compliance with applicable position limits established by the

Commission, a designated contract market, or a swap execution facility

in a written report on a quarterly basis. Such report shall be promptly

reported to and reviewed by the chief compliance officer, senior

management, and governing body of the swap dealer or major swap

participant, and shall include, without limitation, a list of all early

warnings received, all position limit violations, the action taken in

response, the results of the monthly position limit testing required by

this regulation, any deficiencies in the Position Limit Procedures, the

status of any pending amendments to the Position Limit Procedures, and

any action taken to amend the Position Limit Procedures to ensure

compliance with all applicable position limits. Each swap dealer and

major swap participant shall retain a copy of this report.

(h) On an annual basis, each swap dealer and major swap participant

shall audit its Position Limit Procedures as part of the audit of its

Risk Management Program required by Commission regulations.

(i) All records required to be maintained pursuant to these

regulations shall be maintained in accordance with 17 CFR 1.31 and

shall be made available promptly upon request to representatives of the

Commission and to representatives of applicable prudential regulators.

Sec. 23.602 Diligent supervision.

(a) Supervision. Each swap dealer and major swap participant shall

establish and maintain a system to supervise, and shall diligently

supervise, all activities relating to its business performed by its

partners, members, officers, employees, and agents (or persons

occupying a similar status or performing a similar function). Such

system shall be reasonably designed to achieve compliance with the

requirements of the Commodity Exchange Act and Commission regulations.

(b) Supervisory System. Such supervisory system shall provide, at a

minimum, for the following:

(1) The designation, where applicable, of a person with authority

to carry out the supervisory responsibilities of the swap dealer or

major swap participant for all activities relating to its business as a

swap dealer or major swap participant.

(2) The use of reasonable efforts to determine that all supervisors

are qualified and meet such standards of training, experience,

competence, and such other qualification standards as the Commission

finds necessary or appropriate.

Sec. 23.603 Business continuity and disaster recovery.

(a) Business continuity and disaster recovery plan required. Each

swap dealer and major swap participant shall establish and maintain a

written business continuity and disaster recovery plan that outlines

the procedures to be followed in the event of an emergency or other

disruption of its normal business activities. The business continuity

and disaster recovery plan shall be designed to enable the swap dealer

or major swap participant to continue or to resume any operations by

the next business day with minimal disturbance to its counterparties

and the market, and to recover all documentation and data required to

be maintained by applicable law and regulation.

(b) Essential components. The business continuity and disaster

recovery plan of a swap dealer or major swap participant shall include

the following components:

(1) Identification of the documents, data, facilities,

infrastructure, personnel and competencies essential to the continued

operations of the swap dealer or major swap participant and to fulfill

the obligations of the swap dealer or major swap participant.

(2) Identification of the supervisory personnel responsible for

implementing each aspect of the business continuity and disaster

recovery plan and the emergency contacts required to be provided

pursuant to this regulation.

(3) A plan to communicate with the following persons in the event

of an emergency or other disruption, to the extent applicable to the

operations of the swap dealer or major swap participant: Employees;

counterparties; swap data repositories; execution facilities; trading

facilities; clearing facilities; regulatory authorities; data,

communications and infrastructure providers and other vendors; disaster

recovery specialists and other persons essential to the recovery of

documentation and data, the resumption of operations, and compliance

with the Commodity Exchange Act and Commission regulations.

(4) Procedures for, and the maintenance of, back-up facilities,

systems, infrastructure, personnel and other resources to achieve the

timely recovery of data and documentation and to resume operations as

soon as reasonably possible and generally within the next business day.

(5) Maintenance of back-up facilities, systems, infrastructure and

personnel in one or more areas that are geographically separate from

the swap dealer's or major swap participant's primary facilities,

systems, infrastructure and personnel (which may include contractual

arrangements for the use of facilities, systems and infrastructure

provided by third parties).

(6) Back-up or copying, with sufficient frequency, of documents and

data essential to the operations of the swap dealer or major swap

participant or to fulfill the regulatory obligations of the swap dealer

or major swap participant and storing the information off-site in

either hard-copy or electronic format.

(7) Identification of potential business interruptions encountered

by third parties that are necessary to the continued operations of the

swap dealer or major swap participant and a plan to minimize the impact

of such disruptions.

(c) Distribution to employees. Each swap dealer and major swap

participant shall distribute a copy of its business continuity and

disaster recovery plan to relevant employees and promptly provide any

significant revision thereto. Each swap dealer and major swap

participant shall maintain copies of the business continuity and

disaster recovery plan at one or more accessible off-site locations.

Each swap dealer and major swap participant shall train relevant

employees on applicable components of the business continuity and

disaster recovery plan.

(d) Commission notification. Each swap dealer and major swap

participant shall promptly notify the Commission of any emergency or

other disruption that may affect the ability of the swap dealer or

major swap participant to fulfill its regulatory obligations or would

have a significant adverse effect on the swap dealer or major swap

participant, its counterparties, or the market.

(e) Emergency contacts. Each swap dealer and major swap participant

shall provide to the Commission the name and contact information of two

employees who the Commission can contact in the event of an emergency

or other disruption. The individuals identified shall be authorized to

make key decisions on behalf of the swap dealer or major swap

participant and have knowledge of the firm's business continuity and

disaster recovery plan. The swap dealer or major swap participant shall

provide the Commission with any updates to this information promptly.

[[Page 71408]]

(f) Review and modification. A member of the senior management of

each swap dealer and major swap participant shall review the business

continuity and disaster recovery plan annually or upon any material

change to the business. Any deficiencies found or corrective action

taken shall be documented.

(g) Testing. Each business continuity and disaster recovery plan

shall be tested annually by qualified, independent internal audit

personnel or a qualified third party audit service. The date the

testing was performed shall be documented, together with the nature and

scope of the testing, any deficiencies found, any corrective action

taken, and the date that corrective action was taken.

(h) Business continuity and disaster recovery plans required by

other regulatory authorities. A swap dealer or major swap participant

shall comply with the requirements of this regulation in addition to

any business continuity and disaster recovery requirements that are

imposed upon the swap dealer or major swap participant by its

prudential regulator or any other regulatory or self-regulatory

authority.

(i) Recordkeeping. The business continuity and disaster recovery

plan of the swap dealer and major swap participant and all other

records required to be maintained pursuant to this section shall be

maintained in accordance with Commission Regulation Sec. 1.31 and

shall be made available promptly upon request to representatives of the

Commission and to representatives of applicable prudential regulators.

Sec. 23.604 [Reserved]

Sec. 23.605 [Reserved]

Sec. 23.606 General information: Availability for disclosure and

inspection.

(a) Disclosure of information. (1) Each swap dealer and major swap

participant shall make available for disclosure to and inspection by

the Commission and its prudential regulator, as applicable, all

information required by, or related to, the Commodity Exchange Act and

Commission regulations, including:

(i) The terms and condition of its swaps;

(ii) Its swaps trading operations, mechanisms, and practices;

(iii) Financial integrity and risk management protections relating

to swaps; and

(iv) Any other information relevant to its trading in swaps.

(2) Such information shall be made available promptly, upon

request, to Commission staff and the staff of the applicable prudential

regulator, at such frequency and in such manner as is set forth in the

Commodity Exchange Act, Commission regulations, or the regulations of

the applicable prudential regulator.

(b) Ability to provide information. (1) Each swap dealer and major

swap participant shall establish and maintain reliable internal data

capture, processing, storage, and other operational systems sufficient

to capture, process, record, store, and produce all information

necessary to satisfy its duties under the Commodity Exchange Act and

Commission regulations. Such systems shall be designed to produce the

information within the time frames set forth in the Commodity Exchange

Act and Commission regulations or upon request, as applicable.

(2) Each swap dealer and major swap participant shall establish,

implement, maintain, and enforce written procedures for the capture,

processing, recording, storage, and production of all information

necessary to satisfy its duties under the Commodity Exchange Act and

Commission regulations.

(c) Record retention. All records or reports that a swap dealer or

major swap participant is required to maintain pursuant to this

regulation shall be maintained in accordance with 17 CFR 1.31 and shall

be made available promptly upon request to representatives of the

Commission and to representatives of applicable prudential regulators.

Sec. 23.607 Antitrust considerations.

(a) No swap dealer or major swap participant shall adopt any

process or take any action that results in any unreasonable restraint

of trade, or impose any material anticompetitive burden on trading or

clearing, unless necessary or appropriate to achieve the purposes of

the Commodity Exchange Act.

(b) Consistent with its obligations under paragraph (a) of this

section, each swap dealer and major swap participant shall adopt

policies and procedures to prevent actions that result in unreasonable

restraint of trade, or impose any material anticompetitive burden on

trading or clearing.

Issued in Washington, DC, on November 10, 2010, by the

Commission.

David A. Stawick,

Secretary of the Commission.

Statement of Chairman Gary Gensler

Regulations Establishing and Governing the Duties of Swap Dealers and

Major Swap Participants

I support the proposed business conduct standards rulemaking

that establishes risk management policies for swap dealers and major

swap participants. One of the primary goals of the Dodd-Frank Act

was to bring swap dealers and major swap participants under

comprehensive regulation to reduce risk to the financial system and

to the economy as a whole. The proposed rules are consistent with

the Congressional requirement that swap dealers and major swap

participants: (1) Monitor trading to prevent violations of position

limits; (2) establish risk management procedures for managing their

day-to-day business; (3) disclose to the Commission and to

applicable prudential regulators general information relating to

trading practices and financial integrity of swaps; (4) establish

and enforce internal systems and procedures to obtain information

needed to perform all of the duties prescribed; (5) implement

conflicts of interest systems and procedures; and (6) refrain from

unreasonably restraining trade or imposing an anticompetitive burden

on trading or clearing.

[FR Doc. 2010-29009 Filed 11-22-10; 8:45 am]

BILLING CODE 6351-01-P

Last Updated: November 23, 2010