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2011-9446

  • Federal Register, Volume 76 Issue 79 (Monday, April 25, 2011)[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 79 (Monday, April 25, 2011)]

    [Proposed Rules]

    [Pages 22833-22848]

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

    [FR Doc No: 2011-9446]

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    COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION

    17 CFR Part 46

    [3038-AD48]

    Swap Data Recordkeeping and Reporting Requirements: Pre-Enactment

    and Transition Swaps

    AGENCY: Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

    ACTION: Proposed rulemaking.

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    SUMMARY: The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (``Commission'' or

    ``CFTC'') is proposing rules to implement new statutory provisions

    introduced by Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and

    Consumer Protection Act (``Dodd-Frank Act''). The Dodd-Frank Act amends

    the Commodity Exchange Act (``CEA'' or ``Act'') directing that rules

    adopted by the Commission shall provide for the reporting of data

    relating to swaps entered into before the date of enactment of the

    Dodd-Frank Act, the terms of which have not expired as of the date of

    enactment of that Act (``pre-enactment swaps'') and data relating to

    swaps entered into on or after the date of enactment of the Dodd-Frank

    Act and prior to the compliance date specified in the Commission's

    final swap data reporting rules (``transition swaps''). This proposal

    would establish recordkeeping and reporting requirements for pre-

    enactment swaps and transition swaps.

    DATES: Comments must be received by June 9, 2011.

    ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by RIN number 3038-AD48,

    by any of the following methods:

    Agency Web site, via its Comments Online process: http://comments.cftc.gov. Follow the instructions for submitting comments

    through the Web site.

    Mail: David A. 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.

    [[Page 22834]]

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

    Follow the instructions for submitting comments.

    All comments must be submitted in English, or must be 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, you may submit a petition for confidential treatment

    according to the procedures established in CFTC Regulation 145.9.\1\

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

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

    submission from 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.

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    \1\ Commission regulations referred to herein are found at 17

    CFR Ch. 1.

    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: David Taylor, Branch Chief, Market

    Continuity, Division of Market Oversight, 202-418-5488,

    dtaylor@cftc.gov; or Irina Leonova, Financial Economist, Division of

    Market Oversight, 202-418-5646, ileonova@cftc.gov; Commodity Futures

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

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    Washington, DC 20581.

    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Commission is proposing rules under its

    part 46 regulations relating to recordkeeping and reporting

    requirements applicable to both pre-enactment and transition swaps, and

    is soliciting comment on all aspects of the proposed rules. These

    rules, when adopted, will supersede interim final rules previously

    adopted by the Commission in part 44 of its regulations.

    Table of Contents

    I. Background

    A. Swap Data Provisions of the Dodd-Frank Act

    B. The Commission's Proposed Rule on Swap Data Recordkeeping and

    Reporting Requirements

    C. The Interim Final Rules for Pre-Enactment and Transition

    Swaps

    II. Proposed New Regulations, Part 46

    III. Related Matters

    A. Regulatory Flexibility Act

    B. Paperwork Reduction Act

    C. Cost-Benefit Analysis

    IV. Proposed Compliance Date

    V. General Solicitation of Comments

    I. Background

    A. Swap Data Provisions of the Dodd-Frank Act

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

    Act.\2\ Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Act \3\ amended the CEA \4\ to

    establish a comprehensive new regulatory framework for swaps and

    security-based swaps. The legislation was enacted 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 derivatives products; (3) creating robust

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

    Commission's rulemaking and enforcement authorities with respect to,

    among others, all registered entities and intermediaries subject to the

    Commission's oversight.

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    \2\ 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.

    \3\ Pursuant to Section 701 of the Dodd-Frank Act, Title VII may

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

    2010.''

    \4\ 7 U.S.C. 1 et seq.

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    To enhance transparency, promote standardization, and reduce

    systemic risk, Section 728 of the Dodd-Frank Act establishes a newly-

    created registered entity--the swap data repository (``SDR'') \5\--to

    collect and maintain data related to swap transactions as prescribed by

    the Commission, and to make such data electronically available to

    regulators.\6\

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    \5\ See also CEA Sec. 1a(40)(E).

    \6\ Regulations governing core principles and registration

    requirements for, and the duties of, SDRs are the subject of a

    separate notice of proposed rulemaking under part 49 of the

    Commission's regulations. See CFTC Swap Data Repositories: Proposed

    Rule, 75 FR 80898 (Dec. 23, 2010).

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    Section 728 directs the Commission to prescribe standards for swap

    data recordkeeping and reporting. Specifically, Section 728 provides

    that:

    The Commission shall prescribe standards that specify the data

    elements for each swap that shall be collected and maintained by

    each registered swap data repository.\7\

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    \7\ CEA Sec. 21(b)(1)(A).

    These standards are to apply to both registered entities and

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    counterparties involved with swaps:

    In carrying out [the duty to prescribe data element standards],

    the Commission shall prescribe consistent data element standards

    applicable to registered entities and reporting counterparties.\8\

    \8\ CEA Sec. 21(b)(1)(B).

    Section 727 of the Dodd-Frank Act requires that each swap, either

    cleared or uncleared, shall be reported to a registered SDR. That

    Section also amends Section 1(a) of the CEA to add the definition of

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    swap data repository:

    The term `swap data repository' means any person that collects

    and maintains information or records with respect to transactions or

    positions in, or the terms and conditions of, swaps entered into by

    third parties for the purpose of providing a centralized

    recordkeeping facility for swaps.\9\

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    \9\ CEA Sec. 1a(48).

    Section 728 also directs the Commission to regulate data collection

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    and maintenance by SDRs.

    The Commission shall prescribe data collection and data

    maintenance standards for swap data repositories.\10\

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    \10\ CEA Sec. 21(b)(2).

    Section 729 of the Dodd-Frank Act added to the CEA new Section 4r,

    which addresses reporting and recordkeeping requirements for uncleared

    swaps. Pursuant to this section, each swap not accepted for clearing by

    any derivatives clearing organization (``DCO'') must be reported to an

    SDR (or to the Commission if no SDR will accept the swap).

    Section 729 ensures that at least one counterparty to a swap has an

    obligation to report data concerning that swap. The determination of

    this reporting counterparty depends on the status of the counterparties

    involved. If only one counterparty is a swap dealer (``SD''), the SD is

    required to report the swap. If one counterparty is a major swap

    participant (``MSP''), and the other counterparty is neither an SD nor

    an MSP (``non-SD/MSP counterparty''), the MSP must report. Where the

    counterparties have the same status--two SDs, two MSPs, or two non-SD/

    MSP counterparties--the counterparties must select a counterparty to

    report the swap.\11\

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    \11\ See CEA Sec. 4r(a)(3).

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    Section 729 also provides for reporting to the Commission of

    uncleared swaps that are not accepted by any SDR. Under this provision,

    counterparties to such swaps must maintain books and records pertaining

    to their swaps in the manner and for the time required by the

    Commission, and must make these books and records available for

    inspection by the Commission or other specified

    [[Page 22835]]

    regulators if requested to do so.\12\ It also requires counterparties

    to such swaps to provide reports concerning such swaps to the

    Commission upon its request, in the form and manner specified by the

    Commission.\13\ Such reports must be as comprehensive as the data

    required to be collected by SDRs.\14\

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    \12\ CEA Sec. 4r(c)(2) requires individuals or entities that

    enter into an uncleared swap transaction that is not accepted by an

    SDR to make required books and records open to inspection by any

    representative of the Commission; an appropriate prudential

    regulator; the Securities and Exchange Commission; the Financial

    Stability Oversight Council; and the Department of Justice.

    \13\ CEA Sec. 4r(c).

    \14\ CEA Sec. 4r(d).

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    Section 729 establishes in new CEA Section 4r(a)(2)(A) a

    transitional rule applicable to pre-enactment swaps. Section

    4r(a)(2)(A) provides for the reporting of pre-enactment swaps the terms

    of which have not expired as of the enactment of the Dodd-Frank Act to

    an SDR or the Commission, by a date that the Commission determines to

    be appropriate.\15\ Section 4r(a)(2)(B) directed the Commission to

    promulgate an interim final rule within 90 days of the date of

    enactment of the Dodd-Frank Act providing for the reporting of such

    pre-enactment swaps.\16\

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    \15\ Subsection (A) of CEA Section 4r(a)(2) provides that ``Each

    swap entered into before the date of enactment of the Wall Street

    Transparency and Accountability Act of 2010, the terms of which have

    not expired as of the date of enactment of that Act, shall be

    reported to a registered swap data repository or the Commission by a

    date that is not later than--(i) 30 days after issuance of the

    interim final rule; or (ii) such other period as the Commission

    determines to be appropriate.''

    \16\ Pursuant to Section 4r(a)(2)(B), the Commission on October

    14, 2010 published in part 44 of its regulations an interim final

    rule instructing specified counterparties to pre-enactment swaps to

    report data to a registered SDR or to the Commission by a compliance

    date to be established in reporting rules to be promulgated under

    Section 2(h)(5)(A) of the CEA and advising counterparties of the

    necessity, inherent in the reporting requirement, to retain

    information pertaining to the terms of such swaps until reporting

    can be effectuated under permanent rules. See Pre-Enactment Swaps

    IFR, supra, note 17.

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    Section 723 of the Dodd-Frank Act, which adds to the CEA new

    Section 2(h)(5), addresses the reporting of swap data for both swaps

    executed before the enactment of the Dodd-Frank Act \17\ and swaps

    executed on or after the date of that enactment but before the

    compliance date specified in the Commission's final swap data

    recordkeeping and reporting rules.\18\ In a July 15, 2010 floor

    statement concerning swap data reporting as well as other aspects of

    the Dodd-Frank Act, Senator Blanche Lincoln emphasized that the

    provisions of new CEA Section 4r (added by Section 729 of the Dodd-

    Frank Act) and new CEA Section 2(h)(5) (added by Section 723 of the

    Dodd-Frank Act) ``should be interpreted as complementary to one another

    to assure consistency between them. This is particularly true with

    respect to issues such as the effective dates of these reporting

    requirements * * *'' \19\

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    \17\ See CFTC Interim Final Rule for Reporting Pre-Enactment

    Swap Transactions (``Pre-Enactment Swaps IFR''), 75 FR 63080 (Oct.

    14, 2010).

    \18\ See CFTC Interim Final Rule for Reporting Post-Enactment

    Swap Transactions (``Post-Enactment Swaps IFR'' or ``Transition

    Swaps IFR''), 75 FR 78892 (Dec. 17, 2010).

    \19\ Senator Blanche Lincoln, ``Wall Street Transparency and

    Accountability Act,'' Congressional Record, July 15, 2010, at S5923.

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    This proposed rule refers to the two types of swaps addressed in

    CEA Section 2(h)(5) as follows. ``Pre-enactment swap'' means a swap

    executed before date of enactment of the Dodd-Frank Act (i.e., before

    July 21, 2010) the terms of which have not expired as of the date of

    enactment of that Act.\20\ ``Transition swap'' means a swap executed on

    or after the date of enactment of the Dodd-Frank Act (i.e., July 21,

    2010) and before the compliance date specified in the final swap data

    reporting and recordkeeping requirements regulations in part 45 of this

    chapter.\21\ Collectively, the proposed rule refers to pre-enactment

    swaps and transition swaps as ``historical swaps.''

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    \20\ Subsection (A) of CEA Section 2(h)(5) Reporting Transition

    Rules provides that ``Swaps entered into before the date of the

    enactment of this subsection shall be reported to a registered swap

    data repository or the Commission no later than 180 days after the

    effective date of this subsection.''

    \21\ Subsection (B) of CEA Section 2(h)(5) Reporting Transition

    Rules provides that ``Swaps entered into on or after [the] date of

    enactment [of the Dodd-Frank Act] shall be reported to a registered

    swap data repository or the Commission no later than the later of

    (i) 90 days after [the] effective date [of Section 2(h)(5)] or (ii)

    such other time after entering into the swap as the Commission may

    prescribe by rule or regulation.''

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    B. The Commission's Proposed Rule on Swap Data Recordkeeping and

    Reporting Requirements

    On December 8, 2010, the Commission published for comment a notice

    of proposed rulemaking concerning swap data (the ``Swap Data NPRM'')

    that would establish swap data recordkeeping and reporting requirements

    applicable to registered SDRs, derivatives clearing organizations

    (``DCOs''), designated contract markets (``DCMs''), swap execution

    facilities (``SEFs''), SDs, major swap participants MSPs, and non-SD/

    MSP counterparties.\22\ The latter category of swap counterparties

    would include but not be limited to counterparties who qualify for the

    statutory end user exception with respect to particular swaps.\23\

    Consistent with the purposes of the Dodd-Frank Act, the Swap Data NPRM

    would require generally that all DCOs, DCMs, SEFs, and swap

    counterparties keep full, complete and systematic records, together

    with all pertinent data and memoranda, of all activities relating to

    the business of such entities or persons with respect to swaps. The

    proposed rules contemplate that swap data reporting should include data

    from each of two important stages in the existence of a swap: the

    creation of the swap, and the continuation of the swap over its

    existence until its final termination or expiration. The proposed rules

    call for reporting of two sets of data generated in connection with the

    creation of the swap: primary economic terms data and confirmation

    data.\24\ Reporting of swap continuation data can follow either of two

    conceptual approaches described in the Swap Data NPRM: The life cycle

    or event flow approach, or the state or snapshot approach.\25\

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    \22\ 75 FR 76574 (Dec. 8, 2010) (``Swap Data NPRM'').

    \23\ CEA Section 2(h)(7).

    \24\ See Swap Data NPRM, supra, note 22 at 76580-76582.

    \25\ Id. at 76583-76584.

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    The Swap Data NPRM did not address CEA Section 2(h)(5)'s mandate

    that the Commission adopt recordkeeping and reporting rules applicable

    to pre-enactment swaps or transition swaps, but instead noted that a

    separate rulemaking to establish requirements for these historical

    swaps would address the records, information and data required to be

    maintained and the timeframe for reporting such information to a

    registered SDR or to the Commission.\26\ This proposal would establish

    recordkeeping and reporting standards applicable to pre-enactment and

    transition swaps.

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    \26\ Id. at 76580 note 37.

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    C. The Interim Final Rules for Pre-Enactment and Transition Swaps

    Interim Final Rule for Pre-Enactment Swaps. As described above,

    Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Act added new Section 4r(a)(2) to the CEA,

    which provided for the reporting of pre-enactment swaps and directed

    that the Commission promulgate, within 90 days of enactment of the

    Dodd-Frank Act, an interim final rule (``IFR'') providing for the

    reporting of such swaps. On October 14, 2010, pursuant to the mandate

    of CEA Section 4r(a)(2)(B), the Commission published in new part 44 of

    its regulations an IFR instructing specified counterparties to pre-

    enactment swaps to report data to a registered SDR or to the Commission

    by

    [[Page 22836]]

    a compliance date to be established in reporting rules to be

    promulgated under CEA Section 2(h)(5), and advising such counterparties

    of the necessity, inherent in the reporting requirement, to preserve

    information pertaining to the terms of such swaps until reporting was

    effectuated under permanent rules.\27\ This Pre-Enactment Swaps IFR

    stated that the reporting and recordkeeping provisions established by

    Section 4r and Sec. Sec. 44.00-44.02 of the Commission's regulations

    would remain in effect until the effective date of the permanent

    reporting rules to be adopted by the Commission pursuant to Section

    2(h)(5) of the CEA.\28\ A principal purpose of this IFR was to advise

    counterparties of the need to retain data related to swap transactions

    so that reporting could be effectuated under permanent rules

    subsequently to be adopted.

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    \27\ See Pre-Enactment Swaps IFR, supra note 17, at 63083.

    \28\ See Pre-Enactment Swaps IFR, supra note 17.

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    With respect to the scope and coverage of the Pre-Enactment Swaps

    IFR, the Commission acknowledged inconsistencies between the two Dodd-

    Frank provisions governing the Commission's rulemaking. Specifically,

    new CEA Section 4r(a)(2) limits reportable pre-enactment swaps to those

    whose terms have not expired on the date of enactment of the Dodd-Frank

    Act; Section 2(h)(5) does not contain the same qualifying language. As

    discussed in the Pre-Enactment Swaps IFR, the Commission believes that

    failure to limit the term ``pre-enactment swap'' to unexpired swaps

    would require reporting of every swap that has ever been entered into;

    accordingly, the Commission concluded that reportable pre-enactment

    swaps should be limited to those whose terms had not expired at the

    time of enactment.\29\

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    \29\ Id. at 63082.

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    Interim Final Rule for Transition Swaps. Section 4r of the CEA did

    not mandate an IFR establishing reporting provisions for transition

    swaps. The Commission nonetheless believed that such a rule would

    provide clarity and guidance with respect to such swaps, by

    establishing that transition swaps will be subject to Section

    2(h)(5)(B)'s reporting requirements and to Commission regulations to be

    promulgated thereunder. The Commission also believed it was prudent to

    advise potential counterparties to such swaps that implicit in this

    prospective reporting requirement is the need to retain relevant data

    until such time as reporting can be effected. Accordingly, on December

    17, 2010 the Commission published under Part 44 of its regulations

    interim final rules establishing that counterparties to transition

    swaps will be subject to permanent recordkeeping and reporting

    requirements to be adopted by the Commission pursuant to Section

    2(h)(5)(B) of the CEA.\30\

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    \30\ See Transition Swaps IFR, supra note 18.

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    The Commission intended both the Pre-Enactment Swaps IFR and the

    Transition Swaps IFR to put counterparties on notice that swap data

    should be retained pending the adoption of permanent rules for pre-

    enactment and transition swaps under proposed part 46 of this chapter.

    With respect to both pre-enactment and transition swaps, the Commission

    stated that counterparties to these transactions should retain material

    information about such transactions. The Commission emphasized,

    however, that in the context of the interim rules, no counterparty was

    being required to create new records with respect to transactions that

    occurred in the past; instead, records relating to the terms of such

    transactions could be retained in their existing format to the extent

    and in such form as they presently exist.\31\

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    \31\ See Pre-Enactment Swaps IFR, supra note 17, at 63086, and

    Transition Swaps IFR, supra note 18, at 78894.

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    Comments Received. The Commission received a number of comments in

    response to each of the IFRs. Comments generally fell into one or more

    of several broad categories and in a number of instances were common to

    both IFRs. Some commenters observed that issuance of IFRs in advance of

    regulations further defining the term ``swap'' (or defining other key

    terms in the Dodd-Frank Act) creates legal and regulatory uncertainty

    and increases compliance risk; most of these commenters urged the

    Commission to further detail the record retention aspects of the

    interim final rules.\32\ In this connection, commenters requested that

    the Commission issue guidance clarifying and limiting the information

    that must be retained,\33\ or create a safe harbor for good faith

    compliance efforts.\34\ Energy interests suggested that the Commission

    should ensure that end users need only report basic data in a

    simplified reporting scheme, or should outline categories of

    information that need not be retained by persons who anticipate

    becoming eligible for the end user exemption under the Dodd-Frank

    Act.\35\ One commenter urged greater specificity with respect to the

    Pre-Enactment IFR's requirements, as well as consistency with the

    standards adopted by the Securities and Exchange Commission (``SEC'')

    and international regulators, and proposed alternatives to the

    requirements adopted in the IFR for pre-enactment swaps, particularly

    with respect to reporting protocols, record retention, and

    confidentiality issues (notably, those confidentiality issues arising

    in the context of cross-border transactions).\36\ Another commenter

    urged that U.S. swap data reporting requirements should not apply with

    respect to foreign swaps transactions, where counterparties are non-

    U.S. entities.\37\

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    \32\ See, e.g., letters dated November 15, 2010 and January 18,

    2011 from the Working Group of Commercial Energy Firms (``Working

    Group letters''); letter dated November 15, 2010 from Hess

    Corporation (``Hess Corporation letter''); letter dated November 15,

    2010 from the Edison Electric Institute (``EEI letter''); letters

    dated November 15, 2010 and January 18, 2011 from the Not-for-Profit

    Electric End User Coalition (``Coalition letters''); letter dated

    January 18, 2011 from the American Gas Association (``AGA letter'').

    \33\ EEI letter.

    \34\ Working Group letters; EEI letter; Hess Corporation letter.

    \35\ AGA letter; Coalition letters.

    \36\ Letter dated November 12, 2010, from the International

    Swaps and Derivatives Association, Inc. and the Futures Industry

    Association.

    \37\ Letter dated January 11, 2011, from Barclays Bank PLC, BNP

    Paribas S.A., Deutsche Bank AG, Royal Bank of Canada, The Royal Bank

    of Scotland Group PLC, Soci[eacute]t[eacute] G[eacute]n[eacute]rale

    and UBS AG.

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    The Commission is mindful of these concerns and expects to consider

    and address them, as well as all comments received in response to this

    proposed rule, in formulating permanent rules applicable to pre-

    enactment and transition swaps.

    II. Proposed New Regulations, Part 46

    As provided in the Commission's Swap Data NPRM,\38\ Pre-Enactment

    Swaps IFR,\39\ and Transition Swaps IFR,\40\ this proposed rule

    addresses the records, information, and data that must be retained for

    historical swaps, the timeframe for reporting data to an SDR or the

    Commission concerning such swaps, and the specific data to be reported.

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    \38\ See Swap Data NPRM, supra note 20, at fn. 37.

    \39\ See Pre-Enactment Swaps IFR, supra note 17.

    \40\ See Transition Swaps IFR, supra note 18.

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    Recordkeeping. For historical swaps in existence on or after the

    date of publication of the proposed rule, the rule would impose

    limited, specific recordkeeping obligations. Counterparties to such

    swaps would be required to keep records of an asset class-specific set

    of specified, minimum primary economic terms. The Commission believes

    that counterparties to historical swaps will possess this limited set

    of asset class-specific information as part of their normal

    [[Page 22837]]

    business practices.\41\ Commission staff have consulted with industry

    representatives, including buy-side counterparties, concerning

    information routinely kept in this connection for swaps in different

    asset classes. Counterparties to historical swaps in existence on or

    after the date of publication of this proposed rule would also be

    required to keep records of a confirmation of their swaps if they have

    that information in their possession on or after the publication date

    (the date from which public notice of this specific proposed

    recordkeeping requirement is available). The Commission requests

    comment concerning the appropriateness of these limited recordkeeping

    requirements, and specifically requests comment concerning whether all

    counterparties to historical swaps will possess the limited set of

    asset class-specific information called for by the proposed rule as

    part of their normal business practices. If there are any

    counterparties to historical swaps who do not possess the limited set

    of asset class-specific information called for by the proposed rule,

    the Commission requests comment from such counterparties concerning

    what information concerning historical swaps such counterparties do

    possess, and concerning what information such counterparties retain

    concerning their swaps in order to meet the requirements of other

    applicable law, such as hedge accounting requirements or the

    requirements of applicable state law.

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    \41\ The Commission understands that the terminology used to

    describe the specific terms and conditions of a swap can vary among

    market participants, and that agreed definitions for certain terms

    could increase consistency among participants in how historical

    swaps are described. The Commission therefore requests comment on

    whether the proposed minimum primary economic terms for each asset

    class are sufficiently clear in terms of what economic data is

    expected to be reported, or whether further clarification is needed

    in this respect.

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    For historical swaps that were in existence as of the date of

    enactment of the Dodd-Frank Act but have expired or been terminated

    prior to the publication date of this proposed rule, a counterparty

    would only be required to keep records as provided in the Commission's

    IFRs concerning pre-enactment and transition swaps: namely, the

    information and documents relating to the terms of the swap that the

    counterparty possessed when the applicable IFR was published, in

    whatever format that information is kept by the counterparty.\42\

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    \42\ As used in the IFRs, ``format'' refers to the method by

    which the information is organized and stored. It does not refer to

    a recording format (i.e., a format for electronic encoding of data).

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    The Commission understands that the minimum primary economic terms

    for a swap can vary widely depending on the asset class of the

    underlying products or on the nature of a particular product within an

    asset class. Consequently, the Commission encourages the industry to

    reach an internal consensus about the appropriate, asset class-

    specific, minimum primary economic terms to be reported for pre-

    enactment and transition swaps. The Commission welcomes comments from

    industry and market participants in this regard, and will consider them

    in determining the minimum primary economic terms to be specified in

    the final swap data recordkeeping and reporting rules.

    Reporting timeframe. The proposed rule provides that swap data

    reporting for historical swaps would commence on the compliance date

    specified in the Commission's final swap data recordkeeping and

    reporting regulations in part 45 of this chapter.\43\ The Commission

    believes that the purposes of the Dodd-Frank Act can be best served by

    establishing a single date for the commencement of all swap data

    reporting pursuant to that Act. It also believes that the compliance

    date for the final swap data reporting regulations in part 45--the date

    on which reporting must commence--is the most practicable and

    appropriate date for this purpose. The effective date will be set by

    the Commission in its final swap data reporting regulations.\44\ In the

    Swap Data NPRM, the Commission requested comments concerning the time

    needed to prepare automated systems for swap data recordkeeping and

    reporting prior to implementation of the regulations, and it will

    carefully consider the comments received in response to that request.

    The Commission similarly requests comment concerning the proposal to

    specify the same compliance date as the date for initial data reporting

    concerning pre-enactment and transition swaps, and the time needed in

    this connection for preparation of necessary automated systems prior to

    the specified compliance date.

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

    \43\ 17 CFR part 45.

    \44\ As provided in CEA Section 2(h)(5)(B), the effective date

    must be no sooner than 90 days after the effective date of CEA

    Section 2(h)(5), but may be a later date set by the Commission.

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

    Data to be reported. The proposed rule specifies data to be

    reported for historical swaps. For pre-enactment and transition swaps

    in existence on or after the date of publication of this proposed rule,

    the rule specifies the data elements to be reported. For historical

    swaps in existence as of enactment of the Dodd-Frank Act which expired

    or were terminated prior to publication of this proposed rule, the rule

    provides for reporting of the information relating to the terms of the

    transaction that was in the possession of a reporting counterparty as

    of publication of the applicable Commission IFR regarding pre-enactment

    or transition swaps, in such format as it is kept by the reporting

    counterparty.

    As noted above, the Dodd-Frank Act requires reporting of data

    concerning all swaps in existence as of the legislation's

    enactment.\45\ Data concerning pre-enactment swaps and transition swaps

    will assist achievement of the systemic risk mitigation, market

    transparency, and market supervision purposes for which the Dodd-Frank

    Act was enacted. Such data will be needed to give regulators the

    complete picture of the swap market which the comprehensive regulatory

    framework and reporting requirements of the statute are designed to

    provide. Data concerning historical swaps also is necessary for the

    Commission to prepare the semi-annual reports it is required to provide

    to Congress regarding the swap market.

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

    \45\ CEA Section 4r(a)(2)(A).

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

    The Commission is aware that internal swap data retention policies

    are not uniform among swap counterparties, and that the current

    automated systems of market participants vary with respect to their

    suitability for swap data reporting. The Commission believes it is

    appropriate to limit the burden placed on swap counterparties in

    connection with data reporting for historical swaps, to the extent that

    this can be done in a manner consistent with the requirements of the

    Dodd-Frank Act and the Commission's need for such data. The Commission

    has also considered comments received concerning the Pre-Enactment

    Swaps IFR and Transition Swaps IFR which requested that the Commission

    specify clearly what data would be required to be reported concerning

    historical swaps.

    Data reporting for historical swaps in existence as of or after

    publication of this proposed rule. For each pre-enactment or transition

    swap in existence as of or after publication of this proposed rule, the

    rule calls (a) for an initial data report on the compliance date for

    data reporting, and (b), if such a historical swap has not expired or

    been terminated as of the compliance date specified in the final part

    45 swap data reporting regulations, for ongoing reporting of required

    swap continuation data (as defined in the Commission's final part 45

    swap data reporting

    [[Page 22838]]

    regulations) during the remaining existence of the swap.

    The proposed rule calls for the initial data report for historical

    swaps in existence as of or after publication of this proposed rule to

    include the transaction terms included in the swap confirmation if the

    confirmation was in the reporting counterparty's possession on or after

    the publication date of this proposed rule,\46\ and in any event to

    include all of the minimum primary economic terms for a pre-enactment

    or transition swap specified in the appropriate table in the Appendix

    to the proposed rule.

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

    \46\ The Commission understands that counterparties may use

    either a short-form or a long-form confirmation. Either form can be

    used to satisfy this requirement.

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

    The Commission understands that industry definitions used in

    documenting some swap transactions, for instance in some master

    agreements or confirmations, may not match exactly the asset class

    definitions included in this proposed rule, which are the same as the

    asset class definitions in the Commission's part 45 proposed rules

    regarding swap data recordkeeping and reporting requirements. The

    Commission requests comment on how the proposed asset class definitions

    in this proposed rule and the overall swap classification scheme

    embodied in them might most appropriately be aligned with current swap

    instrument classifications used by the industry, and with definitions

    employed by, e.g., the International Swaps and Derivatives Association

    (``ISDA''), the Edison Electric Institute, the North American Energy

    Standards Board, and others.

    In addition, the Commission anticipates that some swaps subject to

    its jurisdiction may belong to two other swap categories: mixed swaps,

    and multi-asset swaps. Generally, a mixed swap is in part a security-

    based swap subject to the jurisdiction of the SEC and in part a swap

    belonging to one of the swap asset classes subject to the jurisdiction

    of the Commission.\47\ Multi-asset swaps are those that do not have one

    easily identifiable primary underlying notional item within the

    Commission's jurisdiction. The Dodd-Frank Act defines ``mixed swap'' as

    follows: ``The term `security-based swap' includes any agreement,

    contract, or transaction that is as described in section 3(a)(68)(A) of

    the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(68)(A)) and is

    also based on the value of 1 [sic] or more interest or other rates,

    currencies, commodities, instruments of indebtedness, indices,

    quantitative measures, other financial or economic interest or property

    of any kind (other than a single security or a narrow-based security

    index), or the occurrence, non-occurrence, or the extent of the

    occurrence of an event or contingency associated with a potential

    financial, economic, or commercial consequence (other than an event

    described in subparagraph (A)(iii).'' \48\ The Commission requests

    comment concerning how such swaps should be treated with respect to

    swap data reporting for historical swaps, and concerning the category

    or categories under which swap data for such swaps should be reported

    to SDRs and maintained by SDRs.

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

    \47\ See Swap Data NPRM, supra note 20, at 76586.

    \48\ Dodd-Frank Act Sec. 721(21), CEA Sec. 1a(47)(D).

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

    The initial data report for historical swaps in existence as of or

    after publication of this proposed rule would also be required to

    include the Unique Counterparty Identifier of the reporting

    counterparty (as defined in part 45),\49\ and the reporting

    counterparty's internal system identifiers for the non-reporting

    counterparty and the particular swap transaction in question.

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

    \49\ The Commission intends to take the need for reporting

    counterparties to obtain Unique Counterparty Identifiers into

    account in setting the effective date for the data reporting rules

    in part 45.

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

    The proposed rule would give non-reporting counterparties an

    additional 180 days after the compliance date specified in the

    Commission's final part 45 rules for data reporting before they would

    be required to obtain and use a Unique Counterparty Identifier in

    connection with pre-enactment and transition swaps. The Commission is

    proposing this additional time because it understands that the majority

    of non-reporting counterparties are likely to be non-SD/MSP

    counterparties. While SDs and MSPs are likely to have infrastructure in

    place that can incorporate and track Unique Counterparty Identifiers,

    non-SD-MSP counterparties could need to acquire new automated systems

    or undertake modifications of existing systems in order to incorporate

    identifiers. The Commission requests comment concerning the

    appropriateness of this additional time, concerning the length of the

    additional time provided, and concerning whether the Commission should

    differentiate further between SD and MSP counterparties versus non-SD/

    MSP counterparties with respect to use of Unique Counterparty

    Identifiers for non-reporting counterparties to pre-enactment and

    transition swaps.

    The proposed rule also requires the reporting counterparty to

    report the master agreement identifier (if any) used by the reporting

    counterparty's automated systems to identify the master agreement

    governing a pre-enactment or transition swap. This information would

    allow the Commission and other regulators to aggregate transactional

    data to calculate net or gross exposure of a particular counterparty.

    The Commission requests comment concerning whether its final swap data

    recordkeeping and reporting regulations for pre-enactment and

    transition swaps should require such reporting of a master agreement

    identifier.

    The Commission requests comment concerning the appropriateness and

    adequacy of these initial data report requirements. Additionally, the

    Commission requests comment on the appropriate method for identifying

    the association of an individual swap transaction with a particular

    master agreement or with a swap portfolio, in order to identify

    individual swaps that may be subject to close-out netting and other

    provisions typical in portfolio compression.\50\ Identifying this

    association could be a necessary means of enabling regulators to

    determine a counterparty's net exposure (current or future) on the

    basis of transactional data reported to SDRs. In particular, the

    Commission requests comment on whether reporting of a master agreement

    identifier as provided in this proposed rule is needed in this

    connection and would provide a workable means of achieving this goal.

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

    \50\ The Commission's proposed rule regarding confirmation,

    portfolio reconciliation and portfolio compression requirements for

    SDs and MSPs, 17 CFR part 23, defines portfolio compression as a

    mechanism whereby substantially similar transactions among two or

    more counterparties are terminated and replaced with a smaller

    number of transactions of decreased notional value, in an effort to

    reduce the risk, cost, and inefficiency of maintaining unnecessary

    transactions on the counterparties' books. See CFTC Notice of

    Proposed Rulemaking: Confirmation, Portfolio Reconciliation and

    Portfolio Compression Requirements for Swap Dealers and Major Swap

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

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

    The Commission has chosen to propose limited requirements for

    recordkeeping and initial data reports concerning pre-enactment and

    transition swaps because it understands that the current recordkeeping

    and reporting systems that some counterparties to such swaps have at

    present might not be able to fulfill, with respect to historical swaps,

    recordkeeping and reporting requirements as extensive as those proposed

    in part 45. In these circumstances, the Commission believes it is

    appropriate to limit the burden imposed on such counterparties, to the

    extent that this can be done in a way

    [[Page 22839]]

    that is consistent with the requirements of the Dodd-Frank Act and the

    Commission's need for data concerning historical swaps. The Commission

    believes, however, that the limited set of minimum primary economic

    terms data set forth in this proposed rule with respect to historical

    swaps is the minimum necessary to give regulators a picture of the risk

    exposures and counterparty participation in such swaps at the minimum

    level necessary for the Commission and other regulators to fulfill

    their regulatory responsibilities. The Commission requests comment

    concerning the appropriateness of this approach to initial data

    reporting for pre-enactment and transition swaps.

    Regarding ongoing reporting of required swap continuation data

    during the remaining existence of a pre-enactment or transition swap

    after the compliance date, the proposed rule follows the life cycle

    approach for credit swaps and equity swaps, and the state or snapshot

    approach for interest rate swaps, currency swaps, and other commodity

    swaps. This same distinction is made in the Commission's Swap Data

    NPRM, which sets forth the Commission's reasons for making this

    distinction, reasons which also apply with respect to part 46. The

    Commission believes that this unified approach to swap data reporting

    rules for pre-enactment, transition, and post-compliance-date swaps

    will minimize recordkeeping and swap data reporting burdens for

    industry and provide a coherent and consistent picture of the overall

    swap market to regulators. Since the proposed part 45 continuation data

    reporting requirements are aligned with the approach taken in the SEC's

    proposed rules for security-based credit and equity swaps, this also

    serves to avoid differing requirements for security-based swaps and

    swaps. The Commission requests comment concerning whether required

    reporting of the same swap continuation data for pre-enactment and

    transition credit swaps and equity swaps, in line with the requirements

    of proposed part 45 and of the SEC's proposed rules, is appropriate in

    this connection.

    For pre-enactment or transition interest rate swaps, currency

    swaps, and other commodity swaps, this proposed rule also limits

    continuation data reporting obligations for non-SD/MSP reporting

    counterparties. Specifically, the proposal requires that SD or MSP

    reporting counterparties must meet continuation data reporting

    requirements for pre-enactment and transition swaps in those asset

    classes that are the same as the continuation data reporting

    requirements of proposed part 45 for swaps in those asset classes.

    While non-SD/MSP reporting counterparties for such swaps are required

    to report the state data \51\ necessary to provide a daily snapshot

    view of the primary economic terms of the swap, the state data that

    must be reported by non-SD/MSP reporting counterparties for such swaps

    is limited to the state data available to the non-SD/MSP reporting

    counterparty on the compliance date. This may consist of only the data

    elements contained in the table of minimum primary economic terms for

    various swap asset classes, as set forth in Appendix 1 to part 46, if

    that is all that was available to the non-SD/MSP reporting counterparty

    on that date. This approach is designed to avoid placing undue

    recordkeeping and reporting burdens on non-SD/MSP counterparties, who

    are the reporting counterparties least likely to have the automated

    systems needed for more extensive reporting with respect to pre-

    enactment or transition swaps. The Commission requests comment

    concerning the appropriateness of this approach to continuation data

    reporting for pre-enactment and transition swaps.

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

    \51\ For purposes of this proposed rule, ``state data'' has the

    meaning defined in part 45 of this chapter. See Swaps Data NPRM,

    supra note 20, at 76599.

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

    Data reporting for historical swaps in existence as of enactment of

    the Dodd-Frank Act but expired or terminated prior to publication of

    this proposed rule. For historical swaps in existence as of enactment

    of the Dodd-Frank Act which expired or were terminated prior to

    publication of this proposed rule, only an initial data report would be

    required.\52\ For such swaps, the proposed rule would require that the

    reporting counterparty report such information relating to the terms of

    the transaction as was in that counterparty's possession as of issuance

    of the relevant Commission IFR.\53\ This information would be permitted

    to be reported in the format in which it was kept by the reporting

    counterparty.\54\

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

    \52\ By its nature, continuation data reporting occurs during

    the continuation of a swap prior to its expiration or termination.

    \53\ Pre-Enactment Swaps IFR, supra note 15, and Transition

    Swaps IFR, supra note 18.

    \54\ This could include submission of a PDF file.

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

    Selection of reporting counterparty. This proposed rule provides

    that determination of which counterparty to a pre-enactment or

    transition swap is the reporting counterparty for that swap shall be

    made according to Dodd-Frank Act's hierarchy of counterparty types for

    reporting obligation purposes, in which SDs outrank MSPs, who outrank

    non-SD/MSP counterparties. Where both counterparties are at the same

    hierarchical level, the statute calls for them to select the

    counterparty obligated to report. The proposed rule establishes a

    mechanism for counterparties to follow in choosing the counterparty to

    report in situations where both counterparties have the same

    hierarchical status. Where both counterparties are SDs, or both are

    MSPs, or both are non-SD/MSP counterparties, the proposed rule requires

    the counterparties to agree as on term of their swap transaction which

    counterparty will fulfill reporting obligations. The proposed rule also

    provides that, where only one counterparty to a swap is a U.S. person,

    the U.S. person should be the reporting counterparty. The Commission

    believes, preliminarily, that this approach may be necessary in order

    to ensure compliance with reporting requirements in such situations. In

    these respects, the proposed rule mirrors the provision of the part 45

    Swap NPRM regarding selection of the reporting counterparty.

    The proposed rule also provides that determination of the reporting

    counterparty shall be made with respect to the current counterparties

    to the swap as of the compliance date (for historical swaps in

    existence as of that date) or as of the prior expiration or termination

    of the swap (for historical swaps expired or terminated prior to the

    compliance date), regardless of who the counterparties to the swap were

    when it was originally executed.

    As noted above, where both counterparties have the same

    hierarchical status, the proposed rule calls for the counterparties to

    agree as one term of their swap transaction which counterparty will

    fulfill reporting obligations. In the case of a historical swap

    executed prior to publication of this proposed rule, for which the

    agreement to enter into the swap has already been made, agreement by

    the counterparties on selection of the reporting counterparty would

    require negotiation occurring after the agreement to enter into the

    swap was made, and could require amendment of the agreement to enter

    into the swap in this respect. The Commission requests comment

    concerning how two SD counterparties, two MSP counterparties, or two

    non-SD/MSP counterparties should select the reporting counterparty for

    a pre-enactment or transition swap which was executed prior to the

    publication date of this proposed rule, and thus does not include an

    agreement term selecting the reporting counterparty. The Commission

    also requests comment concerning whether its final data recordkeeping

    and

    [[Page 22840]]

    reporting rules for historical swaps should prescribe a method for

    selecting a reporting counterparty in such circumstances. The

    Commission may include such a method in the final data recordkeeping

    and reporting rules for historical swaps.

    The Commission has received comments regarding the part 45 Swap

    NPRM suggesting that, where only one counterparty to a swap is a U.S.

    person, the counterparty designated as the reporting counterparty under

    the hierarchical approach based on the Dodd-Frank Act and discussed

    above should be applied in the same way as for a swap where both

    counterparties are U.S. persons. This would mean, for example, that for

    a swap between a non-U.S. SD and a U.S. non-SD/MSP counterparty, the

    non-U.S. SD would be the reporting counterparty. The Commission

    requests comment concerning how the reporting counterparty for a

    historical swap should be selected when one counterparty is a non-U.S.

    person.

    Non-duplication of previous reporting. The Commission is aware that

    in some instances, reporting counterparties may have reported data

    concerning pre-enactment or transition swaps to a presently-existing

    trade repository prior to the compliance date. If such a repository is

    registered with the Commission as an SDR as of the compliance date, the

    Commission would not require reporting counterparties to report

    duplicate information to the SDR, although it would require reporting

    on the compliance date of any information required by this proposed

    rule that had not already been reported to the SDR.

    III. Related Matters

    A. Regulatory Flexibility Act

    The Regulatory Flexibility Act (``RFA'') \55\ requires that

    agencies consider whether the rules they propose will have a

    significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities

    and, if so, provide a regulatory flexibility analysis respecting the

    impact.\56\ The regulations proposed by the Commission would affect

    SDs, MSPs, and non-SD/MSP counterparties who are counterparties to one

    or more pre-enactment or transition swaps. The Commission has

    previously 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.\57\

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

    \55\ 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.

    \56\ 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.

    \57\ 47 FR 18618 (Apr. 30, 1982).

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

    The Commission hereby determines that SDs and MSPs should not be

    considered small entities for purposes of the RFA. SDs and MSPs will

    play a central role in the national regulatory scheme overseeing the

    trading of swaps. With respect to SDs, the Commission previously has

    determined that Futures Commission Merchants (``FCMs'') should not be

    considered to be small entities for purposes of the RFA.\58\ Like FCMs,

    SDs will be subject to minimum capital and margin requirements and are

    expected to comprise the largest global financial firms.\59\ Similarly,

    with respect to MSPs, the Commission has previously determined that

    large traders are not ``small entities'' for RFA purposes.\60\ Like

    large traders, MSPs will maintain substantial positions, creating

    substantial counterparty exposure that could have serious adverse

    effects on the financial stability of the U.S. banking system or

    financial markets.

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

    \58\ 47 FR 18618 (Apr. 30, 1982).

    \59\ Additionally, the Commission is required to exempt from

    designation entities that engage in a de minimis level of swaps. Id.

    at 18619.

    \60\ 47 FR at 18620.

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

    With respect to non-SD/MSP counterparties, the Commission believes

    that the proposed regulations will not create a significant economic

    impact on a substantial number of small entities. The proposed rule

    sets forth recordkeeping and reporting requirements with respect to

    pre-enactment and transition swaps. The Commission believes that the

    records the proposed rule would require to be kept are already kept by

    swap counterparties in their normal course of business. The proposed

    rule would require limited swap data reporting for pre-enactment or

    transition swaps, and would require such reporting by non-SD/MSP

    counterparties only with respect to such swaps in which neither

    counterparty is an SD or MSP. The considerable majority of swaps

    involve at least one SD or MSP. In addition, most end users and other

    non-SD/MSP counterparties who are regulated by the Employee Retirement

    Income Security Act of 1974 (``ERISA''), such as pension funds, which

    are among the most active participants in the swap market, are

    prohibited from transacting directly with other ERISA-regulated

    participants.\61\ For these reasons, the Commission does not believe

    that the regulations would have a significant economic impact on a

    substantial number of small entities.

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

    \61\ 29 U.S.C. 1106.

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

    Accordingly, the Chairman, on behalf of the Commission, hereby

    certifies pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 605(b) that the proposed rule will not

    have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small

    entities. Nonetheless, the Commission specifically requests comment on

    the impact this proposed rule may have on small entities.

    B. Paperwork Reduction Act

    Introduction. Provisions of the proposed rule would result in new

    collection of information requirements within the meaning of the

    Paperwork Reduction Act (``PRA'').\62\ 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 46.2 and

    46.3--Swap Data Recordkeeping and Reporting: Pre-Enactment and

    Transition Swaps,'' OMB control number 3038-NEW. If adopted, responses

    to this new 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 Act strictly

    prohibits the Commission, unless specifically authorized by the Act,

    from making public ``data and information that would separately

    disclose the business transactions or market positions of any person

    and trade secrets or names of customers.'' The Commission also is

    required to protect certain information contained in a government

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

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

    \62\ 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.

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

    Information Provided by Reporting Entities/Persons. The proposed

    rule sets forth recordkeeping and reporting requirements for SDs, MSPs,

    and non-SD/MSP counterparties.

    Recordkeeping Burdens. Under proposed Regulation 46.2, all

    counterparties to pre-enactment or transition swaps would be required

    to keep records relating to such swaps. For swaps that are in existence

    as of or after the enactment of the Dodd-Frank Act, but are expired as

    of the publication of the proposed rule, the proposed Regulation 46.2

    requires that parties simply maintain the swap records already in their

    possession, in the form in which they are already maintained. For

    purposes of the PRA, the Commission will not calculate the burden for

    this requirement; the Commission has previously calculated the burden

    for this requirement in the

    [[Page 22841]]

    PRA analyses for the interim final rules for pre-enactment and

    transition swaps.

    For pre-enactment or transition swaps that are in existence as of

    or after the publication of the proposed rule, the proposed Regulation

    46.2 would require counterparties to keep records of a minimum set of

    primary economic data relating to such swaps. The Commission believes

    that counterparties already would possess this set of primary economic

    data as part of their normal business practices. The proposed

    regulation provides that counterparties must record certain additional

    information (e.g., information relating to confirmation) only if the

    counterparty is in possession of that information on or after the

    publication date of the proposed rule. After the compliance date

    specified in the Commission's final swap data rules in Part 45,

    proposed Regulation 46.2 provides that counterparties must record

    information required by recordkeeping provisions of those final swap

    rules only if such information is available to the counterparty on or

    after the compliance date specified in those rules.

    For historical swaps that are in existence as of or after the

    publication date of the proposed rule, the rule would require the

    counterparties to keep the records beginning on the publication date of

    the proposed rule and through the life of the swap, and for a period of

    at least five years from the final termination of the swap. In

    calculating the burden of this recordkeeping requirement for purposes

    of the PRA, the Commission will not include the burdens occurring after

    the compliance date specified in the Commission's final swap data rules

    in Part 45; the burden occurring after the compliance date is and will

    be subsumed by the recordkeeping burdens calculated for those final

    rules.\63\ Therefore, for this proposed rule, the Commission will only

    calculate a recordkeeping burden for the time period beginning with the

    publication date of this proposed rule, and ending on the compliance

    date. The Commission estimates this period of time to be approximately

    one year. The Commission estimates that 30,300 SDs, MSPs, and non-SD/

    MSP counterparties will be affected by these recordkeeping burdens

    during this time.\64\ With respect to SDs and MSPs (an estimated 300

    entities or persons), which will have higher levels of swap recording

    activity than non-SD/MSP counterparties, the Commission estimates that

    the average one-time burden per entity is 40 hours, excluding customary

    and usual business practices. With respect to non-SD/MSP reporting

    counterparties (an estimated 30,000 entities or persons), who will have

    lower levels of swap recording activity, the Commission estimates that

    the average one-time burden per entity is 10 hours, excluding customary

    and usual business practices. Therefore, the total aggregate one-time

    burden is 312,000 hours. The Commission requests comment on this

    estimate.

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

    \63\ The recordkeeping burden for those final rules is

    calculated based on the number of annual counterparties to swaps and

    therefore implicitly includes counterparties to pre-enactment and

    transition swaps that are unexpired after the effective date.

    \64\ As noted, the applicable recordkeeping burden applies

    during a period estimated by the Commission to be one year. The

    Commission has previously estimated that there are annually 30,000

    non-SD/MSP entities who are counterparties to a swap (see, e.g., the

    Commission's Paperwork Reduction Act statement for the Swap Data

    Recordkeeping and Reporting Requirements Proposed Rulemaking). The

    Commission has also previously estimated that there are 250 SDs and

    50 MSPs. Therefore, a total of 30,300 entities would be subject to

    the recordkeeping burdens of the proposed rule.

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

    Reporting Burdens. The reporting obligations set forth in proposed

    Regulation 46.3 involve both an initial data report and ongoing

    reporting of required swap continuation data relating to pre-enactment

    and transition swaps. For historical swaps that are in existence as of

    or after the enactment of the Dodd-Frank Act, but expired prior to

    publication of the proposed rule, the rule would require only an

    initial data report.

    The proposed regulation provides that reporting counterparties for

    pre-enactment or transition swaps must make an initial data report

    relating to those swaps. The frequency of the report would be once per

    swap, and the report would occur on the compliance date of the

    Commission's final swap data recordkeeping and reporting regulations in

    Part 45. The report would not be required to be made for historical

    swaps that are expired as of the enactment of the Dodd-Frank Act. The

    Commission estimates that there are 1,800 affected entities who will be

    reporting counterparties for pre-enactment and transition swaps.\65\

    The Commission estimates that the average one-time reporting burden for

    each affected entity is 24 hours. Therefore, the total aggregate one-

    time burden is 43,200 hours. The Commission requests comment on this

    estimate.

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

    \65\ The Commission has previously estimated that there are

    annually 1,500 non-SD/MSP counterparties who are a ``reporting

    counterparty'' (see, e.g., the Commission's Paperwork Reduction Act

    statement for the Swap Data Recordkeeping and Reporting Requirements

    Proposed Rulemaking). In addition, the Commission has previously

    estimated that there are 250 SDs and 50 MSPs. The Commission

    believes that the number of entities who are reporting

    counterparties to pre-enactment or transition swaps (that are in

    existence as of or after the enactment of the Dodd-Frank Act) is

    similar to the number of annual reporting counterparties. The

    Commission requests comment on this estimate.

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

    The proposed regulation also provides for an ongoing reporting

    obligation that must be fulfilled by reporting counterparties to pre-

    enactment and transition swaps that are in existence as of the

    compliance date specified in the Commission's final swap data reporting

    rules in part 45. The burden for this ongoing reporting is and will be

    subsumed by the reporting burden calculated for the Commission's final

    swap data recordkeeping and reporting regulations in part 45.\66\

    Therefore, for this proposed rulemaking, the Commission will not

    calculate a burden estimate for ongoing reporting.

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

    \66\ The reporting burden for those final rules is calculated

    based on the number of annual ``reporting counterparties'' to swaps

    and therefore implicitly include reporting counterparties to pre-

    enactment and transition swaps that are unexpired after the

    effective date.

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

    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 collections of information are 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 collections 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 collections 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

    OIRAsubmissions@omb.eop.gov. 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

    RegInfo.gov. OMB is required to make a decision

    [[Page 22842]]

    concerning the collection of information between 30 and 60 days after

    publication of this release. Consequently, a comment to OMB is most

    assured of being fully effective if received by OMB (and the

    Commission) within 30 days after publication of this notice of proposed

    rulemaking.

    C. Cost-Benefit Analysis

    Introduction. Section 15(a) of the CEA requires the Commission to

    consider the costs and benefits of its actions before issuing a

    rulemaking under the Act. By its terms, section 15(a) does not require

    the Commission to quantify the costs and benefits of the rulemaking or

    to determine whether the benefits of the rulemaking outweigh its costs;

    rather, it requires that the Commission ``consider'' the costs and

    benefits of its actions. Section 15(a) further specifies that the costs

    and benefits shall be evaluated in light of five broad areas of market

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

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

    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 areas

    and could in its discretion determine that, notwithstanding its costs,

    a particular rule is necessary or appropriate to protect the public

    interest or to effectuate any of the provisions of or accomplish any of

    the purposes of the Act.

    Summary of Proposed Requirements. The proposed rule provides that

    counterparties to pre-enactment or transition swaps must keep records

    of, and must report, certain information relating to the swaps. The

    proposed reporting requirements involve both an initial report and

    ongoing reporting that continues until the final termination of the

    swap.

    Costs. There are recordkeeping and reporting costs associated with

    the proposed requirements to record and report certain swap

    information. The Commission has crafted the rule to be efficient in

    terms of those costs and has also attempted to minimize the burden on

    non-SD/MSP counterparties. The proposed rule provides that certain

    records must be kept by a counterparty only if the counterparty is in

    possession of that information on or after certain dates as provided in

    the regulations. The proposed rule would require a counterparty to a

    pre-enactment or transition swap in existence as of or after

    publication of this proposed rule to keep, at a minimum, records of a

    specified set of primary economic terms data; however, the Commission

    believes that counterparties already would possess this information as

    part of their normal business practices. For non-SD/MSP reporting

    counterparties for pre-enactment or transition swaps in the interest

    rate, currency, or other commodity asset classes, the proposed rule

    limits the scope of required continuation data reporting to the data

    elements available to the reporting counterparty on the compliance date

    specified in the Commission's final swap data rules in Part 45.

    Benefits. In addition to being mandated by the Dodd-Frank Act,

    reporting of data concerning pre-enactment and transition swaps is

    essential to the fundamental systemic risk mitigation, transparency,

    and market supervision purposes for which the Dodd-Frank Act was

    enacted. This reporting is necessary to give regulators complete

    information regarding the entire swap market. It provides the

    Commission and other financial regulators with necessary insight

    concerning the number of transactions and the number and type of

    participants involved in the swap market, as well as its outstanding

    notional size. Such information provides both a baseline against which

    to assess the development of the swap market over time and a first step

    toward a transparent and well-regulated market for swaps. Data

    concerning pre-enactment and transition swaps also is necessary for the

    Commission to prepare the semi-annual reports it is required to provide

    to Congress.

    Public Comment. For the reasons set forth above, the Commission

    believes that the benefits of the proposed regulations outweigh their

    costs, and has decided to issue them. 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 proposal with their comment

    letters.

    IV. Proposed Compliance Date

    The Commission understands that, after the date on which the

    Commission issues final swap data recordkeeping and reporting

    regulations, including its final regulations concerning pre-enactment

    and transition swaps, the industry will need a reasonable period of

    time to implement the requirements of those regulations. Time may be

    required for entities to register as SEFs, DCMs, DCOs, or SDRs (or for

    extant DCMs or DCOs to revise their rules and procedures) pursuant to

    new Commission regulations concerning such entities. Time may also be

    needed for registered entities and potential swap counterparties to

    adapt or create automated systems capable of fulfilling the

    requirements of Commission regulations concerning swap data

    recordkeeping and reporting. Accordingly, it may be appropriate for the

    Commission's final swap data recordkeeping and reporting regulations,

    including those for pre-enactment and transition swaps, to establish a

    compliance date that is later than the date the final regulations are

    issued.

    The Commission requests comment concerning the need for a

    compliance date for its final swap data recordkeeping and reporting

    regulations, including those for pre-enactment and transition swaps,

    that is later than the date of their issuance; concerning the benefits

    or drawbacks of such an approach; concerning the length of time needed

    for registered entities and potential swap counterparties to prepare

    for implementation in the ways discussed above, or otherwise; and

    concerning the compliance date which the Commission should specify in

    its final regulations concerning swap data recordkeeping and reporting.

    V. General Solicitation of Comments

    The Commission requests comments concerning all aspects of the

    proposed regulations, including, without limitation, all of the aspects

    of the proposed regulations on which comments have been requested

    specifically herein.

    Proposed Rules

    List of Subjects in 17 CFR Part 46

    Swaps, Data recordkeeping requirements and Data reporting

    requirements.

    For the reasons set forth in the preamble, and pursuant to the

    authority in the Commodity Exchange Act, as amended, and in particular

    Sections 2(h)(5) and 4r(a), the Commission also hereby proposes to

    amend Chapter 1 of Title 17 of the Code of Federal Regulations by

    adding Part 46 to read as follows:

    PART 46--SWAP DATA RECORDKEEPING AND REPORTING REQUIREMENTS: PRE-

    ENACTMENT AND TRANSITION SWAPS

    Sec.

    46.1 Definitions.

    46.2 Recordkeeping for pre-enactment swaps and transition swaps.

    46.3 Swap data reporting for pre-enactment swaps and transition

    swaps.

    46.4 Unique identifiers.

    [[Page 22843]]

    46.5 Determination of which counterparty must report.

    46.6 Third-party facilitation of data reporting.

    46.7 Reporting to a single swap data repository.

    46.8 Data reporting for swaps in a swap asset class not accepted by

    any swap data repository.

    46.9 Required data standards.

    46.10 Reporting of errors and omissions in previously reported data.

    Appendix to Part 46--Tables of Minimum Primary Economic Terms Data

    for Pre-Enactment and Transition Swaps.

    Authority: Title VII, sections 723 and 729, Pub. L. 111-203,

    124 Stat. 1738.

    Sec. 46.1 Definitions.

    Terms used in this part are defined as follows:

    Asset class means the particular broad category of goods, services

    or commodities underlying a swap. The asset classes include interest

    rate, currency, credit, equity, other commodity, and such other asset

    classes as may be determined by the Commission.

    Compliance date means the compliance date specified in the final

    swap data recordkeeping and reporting regulations in part 45 of this

    chapter as the date on which those regulations will be implemented,

    i.e., the date on which registered entities and swap counterparties

    must begin to comply with those regulations.

    Confirmation (confirming) means the consummation (electronically or

    otherwise) of legally binding documentation (electronic or otherwise)

    that memorializes the agreement of the parties to all terms of a swap.

    A confirmation must be in writing (whether electronic or otherwise) and

    must legally supersede any previous agreement (electronically or

    otherwise).

    Confirmation data means all of the terms of a swap matched and

    agreed upon by the counterparties in confirming the swap.

    Credit support agreement means an International Swaps and

    Derivatives Association, Inc. credit support agreement or equivalent

    agreement.

    Credit swap means any swap that is primarily based on instruments

    of indebtedness, including, without limitation: any swap primarily

    based on one or more broad-based indices related to instruments of

    indebtedness; and any swap that is an index credit swap or total return

    swap on one or more indices of debt instruments.

    Currency swap means any swap which is primarily based on rates of

    exchange between different currencies, changes in such rates, or other

    aspects of such rates. This category includes foreign exchange swaps as

    defined in Commodity Exchange Act Section 1a(25).

    Electronic reporting or reporting electronically means reporting

    data in compliance with Sec. 46.9 of this part. The obligation to

    report electronically is not satisfied by electronic transmission of an

    image of a document.

    Equity swap means any swap that is primarily based on equity

    securities, including, without limitation: any swap primarily based on

    one or more broad-based indices of equity securities; and any total

    return swap on one or more equity indices.

    Interest rate swap means any swap which is primarily based on one

    or more interest rates, such as swaps of payments determined by fixed

    and floating interest rates.

    Major swap participant has the meaning set forth in Commodity

    Exchange Act, Section 1a(33), and any Commission regulation

    implementing that Section.

    Master agreement means an agreement, signed by the counterparties,

    providing comprehensive documentation of standard terms and conditions

    covering one or more swap transactions between such counterparties.

    Non-swap dealer/major swap participant counterparty means a swap

    counterparty that is neither a swap dealer nor a major swap

    participant.

    Other commodity swap means any swap not included in the credit

    swap, currency swap, equity swap, or interest rate swap categories,

    including, without limitation, any swap for which the primary

    underlying item is a physical commodity or the price or any other

    aspect of a physical commodity.

    Pre-enactment swap means any swap entered into prior to enactment

    of the Dodd-Frank Act of 2010 (July 21, 2010), the terms of which have

    not expired as of the date of enactment of that Act.

    Reporting counterparty means the counterparty required to report

    swap data pursuant to Sec. 45.5 of this chapter.

    Swap data repository has the meaning set forth in Commodity

    Exchange Act Section 1a(48), and any Commission regulation implementing

    that Section.

    Swap dealer has the meaning set forth in Commodity Exchange Act,

    Section 1a(49), and any Commission regulation implementing that

    Section.

    Transition swap means any swap entered into on or after the

    enactment of the Dodd-Frank Act of 2010 (July 21, 2010) and prior to

    the compliance date specified in the final swap data reporting and

    recordkeeping requirements regulations in part 45 of this chapter.

    Sec. 46.2 Recordkeeping for pre-enactment swaps and transition swaps.

    (a) Recordkeeping for pre-enactment and transition swaps in

    existence on or after April 25, 2011. Each counterparty to any pre-

    enactment swap or transition swap that is in existence on or after

    April 25, 2011 shall keep the following records concerning each such

    swap:

    (1) Minimum records required. The minimum records required to be

    kept concerning each pre-enactment swap and transition swap shall be as

    follows:

    (i) Each counterparty shall keep records of all of the minimum

    primary economic terms data specified in the appendix to this part.

    (ii) If at any time on or after April 25, 2011 a counterparty is in

    possession of a confirmation of the swap executed by the

    counterparties, the counterparty shall keep records of all terms of

    that confirmation.

    (2) Additional records required to be kept if possessed by a

    counterparty. In addition to the minimum records required pursuant to

    paragraph (a)(1) of this part, a counterparty that is in possession at

    any time on or after April 25, 2011 of any of the following

    documentation shall keep copies thereof:

    (i) Any master agreement governing the swap, and any modification

    or amendment thereof.

    (ii) Any credit support agreement or equivalent documentation

    relating to the swap, and any modification or amendment thereof.

    (3) Records created or available after the compliance date. In

    addition to the records required to be kept pursuant to paragraphs

    (a)(1) and (2) of this section, each counterparty to any pre-enactment

    swap or transition swap that remains in existence on the compliance

    date shall keep for each such swap, from the compliance date forward,

    all of the records required to be kept by Sec. 45.2 of this chapter,

    to the extent that any such records are created by or become available

    to the counterparty on or after the compliance date.

    (b) Recordkeeping for pre-enactment and transition swaps expired or

    terminated prior to April 25, 2011. Each counterparty to any pre-

    enactment swap or transition swap that is expired or terminated prior

    to April 25, 2011 shall keep the following records concerning each such

    swap:

    (1) Pre-enactment swaps expired prior to April 25, 2011. Each

    counterparty to any pre-enactment swap that expired or was terminated

    prior to April 25, 2011 shall retain the information and documents

    relating to the terms of the transaction that were possessed by the

    counterparty on or after October 14,

    [[Page 22844]]

    2010 (17 CFR 44.00 through 44.02). Such information may be retained in

    the format in which it existed on or after October 14, 2010, or in such

    other format as the counterparty chooses to retain it. This paragraph

    (b)(1) does not require the counterparty to create or retain records of

    information not in its possession on or after October 14, 2010, or to

    alter the format, i.e., the method by which the information is

    organized and stored.

    (2) Transition swaps expired prior to April 25, 2011. Each

    counterparty to any transition swap that expired or was terminated

    prior to April 25, 2011 shall retain the information and documents

    relating to the terms of the transaction that were possessed by the

    counterparty on or after December 17, 2010 (17 CFR 44.03). Such

    information may be retained in the format in which it existed on or

    after December 17, 2010, or in such other format as the counterparty

    chooses to retain it. This paragraph (b)(2) does not require the

    counterparty to create or retain records of information not in its

    possession on or after December 17, 2010, or to alter the format, i.e.,

    the method by which the information is organized and stored.

    (c) Retention period. All records required to be kept by this Sec.

    46.2 shall be kept from the applicable dates specified in paragraph (b)

    of this section through the life of the swap, and for a period of at

    least five years from the final termination of the swap, in a form and

    manner acceptable to the Commission.

    (d) Retrieval. Records required to be kept pursuant to this Sec.

    46.2 shall be retrievable as follows:

    (1) Each record required to be kept by a counterparty that is a

    swap dealer or major swap participant shall be readily accessible via

    real time electronic access by the counterparty throughout the life of

    the swap and for two years following the final termination of the swap,

    and shall be retrievable by the registrant or its affiliates within

    three business days through the remainder of the period following final

    termination of the swap during which it is required to be kept.

    (2) Each record required to be kept by a non-swap dealer/major swap

    participant counterparty shall be retrievable by the counterparty

    within three business days through the period during which it is

    required to be kept.

    (e) Inspection. All records required to be kept pursuant to this

    section shall be open to inspection upon request by any representative

    of the Commission, the United States Department of Justice, or the

    Securities and Exchange Commission, or by any representative of a

    prudential regulator. Copies of all such records shall be provided, at

    the expense of the entity or person required to keep the record, to any

    representative of the Commission upon request, either by electronic

    means, in hard copy, or both, as requested by the Commission.

    Sec. 46.3 Swap data reporting for pre-enactment swaps and transition

    swaps.

    (a) Reporting for pre-enactment and transition swaps in existence

    on or after April 25, 2011. (1) Initial data report. For each pre-

    enactment swap or transition swap in existence on or after April 25,

    2011, the reporting counterparty shall report electronically to a swap

    data repository (or to the Commission if no swap data repository for

    swaps in the asset class in question is available), on the compliance

    date, the following:

    (i) All of the terms of the confirmation that are recorded in the

    automated systems of the reporting counterparty, if the terms so

    reported include all of the minimum primary economic terms data

    specified in the appendix to this part; or all of the minimum primary

    economic terms data specified in the appendix to this part;

    (ii) The Unique Counterparty Identifier required pursuant to Sec.

    46.4 of this part; and

    (iii) The following additional identifiers:

    (A) The internal counterparty identifier used by the automated

    systems of the reporting counterparty to identify the non-reporting

    counterparty;

    (B) The internal transaction identifier used by the automated

    systems of the reporting counterparty to identify the swap; and

    (C) The internal master agreement identifier (if any) used by the

    automated systems of the reporting counterparty to identify the master

    agreement governing the swap.

    (2) Non-duplication of previous reporting. If the reporting

    counterparty for a pre-enactment or transition swap has reported any of

    the information required as part of the initial data report by

    paragraph (a) of this section to a trade repository prior to the

    compliance date, and if as of the compliance date that repository has

    registered with the Commission as a swap data repository, then:

    (i) The counterparty shall not be required to report such

    previously reported information to the swap data repository again;

    (ii) The counterparty shall be required to report to the swap data

    repository on the compliance date any information required as part of

    the initial data report by Sec. 46.3(a) of this part that has not been

    reported prior to the compliance date; and

    (iii) The initial data report required by paragraph (b)(2) of this

    section and all subsequent data reporting concerning the swap shall be

    made to the same swap data repository to which data concerning the swap

    was reported prior to the compliance date (or to its successor in the

    event that it ceases to operate, as provided in part 49 of this

    chapter).

    (3) Reporting of required swap continuation data for a credit swap

    or equity swap. For each pre-enactment or transition swap in either the

    credit swap or equity swap asset class, that is in existence on or

    after April 25, 2011, throughout the existence of the swap following

    the compliance date, the reporting counterparty, as defined in part 45

    of this chapter, shall report all required swap continuation data

    required to be reported for credit swaps or equity swaps under part 45

    of this chapter.

    (4) Reporting of required swap continuation data for an interest

    rate swap, other commodity swap, or currency swap. For each pre-

    enactment or transition swap in the interest rate, other commodity, or

    currency asset class, that is in existence on or after April 25, 2011,

    throughout the existence of the swap following the compliance date, the

    reporting counterparty as defined in part 45 shall report required swap

    continuation data as follows:

    (i) Swaps for which the reporting counterparty is a swap dealer or

    major swap participant. For each pre-enactment swap or transition swap

    in existence on or after April 25, 2011, for which the reporting

    counterparty as defined in part 45 is a swap dealer or major swap

    participant, the reporting counterparty shall report to a swap data

    repository electronically all required swap continuation data

    concerning the swap as provided in part 45.

    (ii) Swaps for which the reporting counterparty is a non-swap

    dealer/major swap participant counterparty. For each pre-enactment swap

    or transition swap in existence on or after April 25, 2011, for which

    the reporting counterparty as defined in part 45 is a non-swap dealer/

    major swap participant counterparty, the reporting counterparty shall

    report to a swap data repository electronically all required swap

    continuation data concerning the swap as provided in part 45. However,

    notwithstanding any other provision of part 45, the state data reported

    to provide a snapshot view, on a daily basis, of the primary economic

    terms of the swap shall be the greater of the following which is in the

    possession of

    [[Page 22845]]

    the reporting counterparty on the compliance date:

    (A) The state data, or any part thereof, for the swap as defined in

    part 45 of this chapter; or

    (B) All of the data elements contained in the table of minimum

    primary economic terms for pre-enactment or transition swaps in the

    asset class of the swap in question that is included in the appendix to

    this part.

    (b) Reporting for pre-enactment and transition swaps expired or

    terminated prior to April 25, 2011. (1) Pre-enactment swaps expired or

    terminated prior to April 25, 2011. For each pre-enactment swap which

    expired or was terminated prior to April 25, 2011, the reporting

    counterparty shall report to a swap data repository (or to the

    Commission if no swap data repository for swaps in the asset class in

    question is available), on the compliance date, such information

    relating to the terms of the transaction as was in the reporting

    counterparty's possession on or after October 14, 2010 (17 CFR 44.00

    through 44.02). This information can be reported via any method

    selected by the reporting counterparty.

    (2) Transition swaps expired or terminated prior to April 25, 2011.

    For each transition swap which expired or was terminated prior to April

    25, 2011, the reporting counterparty shall report to a swap data

    repository (or to the Commission if no swap data repository for swaps

    in the asset class in question is available), on the compliance date,

    such information relating to the terms of the transaction as was in the

    reporting counterparty's possession on or after December 17, 2010 (17

    CFR 44.03). This information can be reported via any method selected by

    the reporting counterparty.

    Sec. 46.4 Unique identifiers.

    The unique identifier requirements for swap data reporting with

    respect to pre-enactment or transition swaps shall be as follows:

    (a) By the compliance date, the reporting counterparty (as defined

    by part 45 of this chapter) for each pre-enactment or transition swap

    in existence on or after April 25, 2011, for which an initial data

    report is required by this part 46, shall obtain a Unique Counterparty

    Identifier, as provided in part 45, for itself, and shall include its

    own Unique Counterparty Identifier in the initial data report

    concerning the swap. With respect to that Unique Counterparty

    Identifier, the reporting counterparty and the swap data repository to

    which the swap is reported shall comply thereafter with all unique

    identifier requirements of part 45 respecting Unique Counterparty

    Identifiers.

    (b) Within 180 days after the compliance date, the non-reporting

    counterparty for each pre-enactment or transition swap in existence on

    or after April 25, 2011 for which an initial data report is required by

    this part 46, shall obtain a Unique Counterparty Identifier, as

    provided in part 45, for itself, and shall provide that Unique

    Counterparty Identifier to the reporting counterparty. Upon receipt of

    the non-reporting counterparty's Unique Counterparty Identifier, the

    reporting counterparty shall provide that Unique Counterparty

    Identifier to the swap data repository to which swap data for the swap

    was reported. Thereafter, with respect to the Unique Counterparty

    Identifier of the non-reporting counterparty the counterparties to the

    swap and the swap data repository to which it is reported shall comply

    with all requirements of part 45 respecting Unique Counterparty

    Identifiers.

    (c) The Unique Counterparty Identifier requirements of parts 46 and

    45 of this chapter shall not apply to pre-enactment or transition swaps

    expired or terminated prior to April 25, 2011.

    (d) The Unique Swap Identifier and Unique Product Identifier

    requirements of part 45 of this chapter shall not apply to pre-

    enactment or transition swaps.

    Sec. 46.5 Determination of which counterparty must report.

    (a) Determination of which counterparty must report swap data

    concerning each pre-enactment or transition swap shall be made as

    follows:

    (1) If only one counterparty is an SD, the SD shall fulfill all

    counterparty reporting obligations.

    (2) If neither party is an SD, and only one counterparty is an MSP,

    the MSP shall fulfill all counterparty reporting obligations.

    (3) For each pre-enactment swap or transition swap for which both

    counterparties are SDs, or both counterparties are MSPs, or both

    counterparties are non-SD/MSP counterparties, the counterparties shall

    agree as one term of their swap transaction which counterparty shall

    fulfill reporting obligations with respect to that swap; and the

    counterparty so selected shall fulfill all counterparty reporting

    obligations.

    (4) Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraphs (a)(1) through (3)

    of this section, if only one counterparty to a pre-enactment swap or

    transition swap is a U.S. person, that counterparty shall be the

    reporting counterparty and shall fulfill all counterparty reporting

    obligations.

    (5) If a reporting counterparty selected pursuant to paragraphs

    (a)(1) through (4) of this section ceases to be a counterparty to a

    swap due to an assignment or novation, and the new counterparty is a

    U.S. person, the new counterparty shall be the reporting counterparty

    and fulfill all reporting counterparty obligations following such

    assignment or novation. If a new counterparty to a swap due to an

    assignment or novation is not a U.S. person, the counterparty that is a

    U.S. person shall be the reporting counterparty and fulfill all

    reporting counterparty obligations following such assignment or

    novation.

    (b) For pre-enactment and transition swaps in existence as of the

    compliance date, determination of the reporting counterparty shall be

    made by applying the provisions of paragraph (a) of this section with

    respect to the current counterparties to the swap as of the compliance

    date, regardless of whether either or both were original counterparties

    to the swap when it was first executed.

    (c) For pre-enactment and transition swaps for which reporting is

    required, but which have expired or been terminated prior to the

    compliance date, determination of the reporting counterparty shall be

    made by applying the provisions of paragraph (a) of this section to the

    counterparties to the swap as of the date of its expiration or

    termination, regardless of whether either or both were original

    counterparties to the swap when it was first executed.

    Sec. 46.6 Third-party facilitation of data reporting.

    Counterparties required by this part 46 to report swap data for any

    pre-enactment or transition swap, while remaining fully responsible for

    reporting as required by this part 46, may contract with third-party

    service providers to facilitate reporting.

    Sec. 46.7 Reporting to a single swap data repository.

    All data reported for each pre-enactment or transition swap

    pursuant to this part 46, and all corrections of errors and omissions

    in previously reported data for the swap, by any registered entity or

    counterparty, shall be reported to the same swap data repository to

    which the initial data report concerning the swap is made (or to its

    successor in the event that it ceases to operate, as provided in part

    49 of this chapter).

    [[Page 22846]]

    Sec. 46.8 Data reporting for swaps in a swap asset class not accepted

    by any swap data repository.

    Should there be a swap asset class for which no swap data

    repository currently accepts swap data, each counterparty required by

    this part 46 to report swap data with respect to a pre-enactment or

    transition swap in that asset class must report that same data at a

    time and in a form and manner determined by the Commission.

    Sec. 46.9 Required data standards.

    In reporting swap data to a swap data repository as required by

    this part 46, each reporting counterparty shall use the facilities,

    methods, or data standards provided or required by the swap data

    repository to which counterparty reports the data.

    Sec. 46.10 Reporting of errors and omissions in previously reported

    data.

    (a) Each swap counterparty required by this part 46 to report swap

    data shall report any errors and omissions in the data so reported.

    Corrections of errors or omissions shall be reported as soon as

    technologically practicable after discovery of any such error or

    omission.

    (b) For pre-enactment or transition interest rate swaps, currency

    swaps, or other commodity swaps in existence as of the compliance date,

    reporting counterparties fulfill the requirement to report errors or

    omissions in state data previously reported as part of required

    continuation data reporting by making appropriate corrections in their

    next daily report of state data as required by this part 46 and part 45

    of this chapter.

    (c) Each counterparty to a pre-enactment or transition swap that is

    not the reporting counterparty as determined pursuant to part 45, and

    that discovers any error or omission with respect to any swap data

    reported to a swap data repository for that swap, shall promptly notify

    the reporting counterparty of each such error or omission. Upon

    receiving such notice, the reporting counterparty shall report a

    correction of each such error or omission to the swap data repository,

    as provided in Sec. 45.10(a) and (b) of this chapter.

    (d) Unless otherwise approved by the Commission, or by the Director

    of Market Oversight pursuant to part 45 of this chapter, each swap

    counterparty reporting corrections to errors or omissions in data

    previously reported as required by this part 46 shall report such

    corrections in the same format as it reported the erroneous or omitted

    data.

    Appendix to Part 46--Tables of Minimum Primary Economic Terms Data for

    Pre-Enactment and Transition Swaps

    Minimum Primary Economic Terms Data for Pre-Enactment and Transition

    Credit Swaps and Equity Swaps

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

    Sample category Comment

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

    An indication of the counterparty E.g., option buyer and option

    purchasing protection and of the seller; buyer and seller.

    counterparty selling protection.

    Information identifying the reference The entity that is the subject

    entity. of the protection being

    purchased and sold in the

    swap.

    An indication of whether or not both ...............................

    counterparties are swap dealers.

    An indication of whether or not both ...............................

    counterparties are major swap

    participants.

    An indication of whether or not either ...............................

    counterparty is a swap dealer or major

    swap participant.

    The date and time of trade, expressed ...............................

    using Coordinated Universal Time

    (``CUT'').

    The venue where the swap was executed. ...............................

    The effective date for the swap. ...............................

    The expiration date for the swap. ...............................

    The price.............................. E.g., strike, initial price,

    spread, etc.

    The notional amount, the currency in ...............................

    which the notional amount is

    expressed, and the equivalent notional

    amount in U.S. dollars.

    The amount and currency or currencies ...............................

    of any up-front payment.

    A description of the payment streams of E.g., coupon.

    each counterparty.

    The title of any master agreement E.g., annex, credit agreement.

    incorporated by reference and the date

    of any such agreement.

    If the transaction involved an existing E.g., assignment.

    swap, an indication that the

    transaction did not involve an

    opportunity to negotiate a material

    term of the contract, other than the

    counterparty.

    The data elements necessary for a ...............................

    person to determine the market value

    of the transaction.

    Whether or not the swap will be cleared ...............................

    by a derivatives clearing

    organization.

    The name of the derivatives clearing ...............................

    organization that will clear the swap,

    if any.

    If the swap is not cleared, all of the ...............................

    settlement terms, including, without

    limitation, whether the swap is cash-

    settled or physically settled, and the

    method for determining the settlement

    value.

    Any other primary economic term(s) of ...............................

    the swap matched by the counterparties

    in verifying the swap.

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

    Minimum Primary Economic Terms Data for Pre-Enactment and Transition

    Currency Swaps

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

    Sample data field Comments

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

    1 Contract type........................ E.g., swap, swaption, forwards,

    options, basis swap, index

    swap, basket swap, other.

    2 Swap transaction date................ Date when the swap was entered.

    [[Page 22847]]

    3 Currency 1........................... International Organization for

    Standardization Code.

    4 Currency 2........................... International Organization for

    Standardization Code.

    5 Notional amount 1.................... For currency one.

    6 Notional amount 2.................... For currency two.

    7 Settlement agent of the reporting ID of the settlement agent.

    counterparty.

    8 Settlement agent of the non-reporting ID of the settlement agent.

    counterparty.

    9 Settlement currency.................. If applicable.

    10 Exchange rate 1..................... At the moment of trade/

    agreement.

    11 Exchange rate 2..................... At the moment of trade/

    agreement, if applicable.

    12 Swap delivery type.................. Cash or physical.

    13 Expiration date..................... Expiration date of the

    contract.

    Any other primary economic term(s) of

    the swap matched by the counterparties

    in verifying the swap.

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

    Minimum Primary Economic Terms Data for Pre-Enactment and Transition

    Interest Rate Swaps

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

    Sample data field Comment

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

    1 Contract type........................ E.g., swap, swaption, option,

    basis swap, index swap, etc.

    2 Swap transaction date................ Date when the swap was entered.

    3 Swap effective date.................. Effective date of the contract.

    4 Swap end-date........................ Expiration date of the

    contract.

    5 Notional amount one.................. The current active notional in

    local currency.

    6 Notional currency one................ International Organization for

    Standardization code of the

    notional currency.

    7 Notional amount two.................. The second notional amount

    (e.g., receiver leg).

    8 Notional currency two................ International Organization for

    Standardization code of the

    notional currency.

    9 Payer (fixed rate)................... Is the reporting party a fixed

    rate payer? Yes/No/Not

    applicable.

    10 Fixed leg payment frequency......... How often will the payments on

    fixed leg be made.

    11 Direction........................... For swaps--if the principal is

    paying or receiving the fixed

    rate. For float-to-float and

    fixed-to-fixed swaps, it is

    unspecified. For non-swap

    instruments and swaptions, the

    instrument that was bought or

    sold.

    12 Option type......................... E.g., put, call, straddle.

    13 Fixed rate..........................

    14 Fixed rate day count fraction.......

    15 Floating rate payment frequency.....

    16 Floating rate reset frequency.......

    17 Floating rate index name/rate period

    18 Leg 1............................... If two floating legs, report

    what is paid.

    19 Leg 2............................... If two floating legs, report

    what is received.

    Any other primary economic term(s) of

    the swap matched by the counterparties

    in verifying the swap.

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

    Minimum Primary Economic Terms Data for Pre-Enactment and Transition

    Other Commodity Swaps

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

    Sample data field Comment

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

    1 Contract type........................ E.g., swap, swaption, option,

    etc.

    2 Swap transaction date................ Date when the swap was entered.

    3 Quantity............................. The unit of measure applicable

    for the quantity on the swap.

    4 Start date........................... Predetermined start date from

    which payments will be

    exchanged.

    5 End-date............................. Predetermined end date from

    which payments will be

    exchanged.

    6 Buyer pay index...................... The published price as paid by

    the buyer.

    7 Seller pay index..................... The published price as paid by

    the seller.

    8 Buyer................................ Party purchasing product, e.g.

    payer of the fixed price (for

    swaps), or payer of the

    floating price (for put

    swaption), or payer of the

    fixed price (for call

    swaption).

    9 Seller............................... Party offering product, e.g.

    payer of the floating price

    (for swaps), payer of the

    fixed price (for put

    swaption), or payer of the

    floating price (for call

    swaption).

    10 Price............................... E.g., fixed price, the heat

    rate value, etc.

    11 Price unit.......................... The unit of measure applicable

    for the price on the

    transaction.

    12 Grade............................... E.g., the grade of oil or

    refined product being

    delivered.

    Any other primary economic term(s) of

    the swap matched by the counterparties

    in verifying the swap.

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

    [[Page 22848]]

    Issued in Washington, DC, on April 6, 2011, by the Commission.

    David A. Stawick,

    Secretary of the Commission.

    [FR Doc. 2011-9446 Filed 4-22-11; 8:45 am]

    BILLING CODE 6351-01-P

    Last Updated: April 25, 2011



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