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2011-1154

  • Federal Register, Volume 76 Issue 17 (Wednesday, January 26, 2011)[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 17 (Wednesday, January 26, 2011)]

    [Proposed Rules]

    [Pages 4752-4777]

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

    [FR Doc No: 2011-1154]

    [[Page 4751]]

    Vol. 76

    Wednesday,

    No. 17

    January 26, 2011

    Part II

    Commodity Futures Trading Commission

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    17 CFR Parts 1, 150 and 151

    Position Limits for Derivatives; Proposed Rule

    Federal Register / Vol. 76 , No. 17 / Wednesday, January 26, 2011 /

    Proposed Rules

    [[Page 4752]]

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    COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION

    17 CFR Parts 1, 150 and 151

    RIN 3038-AD15 and 3038-AD16

    Position Limits for Derivatives

    AGENCY: Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

    ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.

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    SUMMARY: Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer

    Protection Act of 2010 (``Dodd-Frank Act'') requires the Commodity

    Futures Trading Commission (``Commission'' or ``CFTC'') to establish

    position limits for certain physical commodity derivatives. The

    Commission is proposing to simultaneously establish position limits and

    limit formulas for certain physical commodity futures and option

    contracts executed pursuant to the rules of designated contract markets

    (``DCM'') and physical commodity swaps that are economically equivalent

    to such DCM contracts. In compliance with the requirements of the Dodd-

    Frank Act, the CFTC is also proposing aggregate position limits that

    would apply across different trading venues to contracts based on the

    same underlying commodity. The Commission is proposing to establish

    position limits in two phases: The first phase would involve adopting

    current DCM spot-month limits, while the second phase would involve

    establishing non-spot-month limits based on open interest levels as

    well as establishing Commission-determined spot-month limits. The

    proposal includes exemptions for bona fide hedging transactions and for

    positions that are established in good faith prior to the effective

    date of specific limits that could be adopted pursuant to final

    regulations. This notice of rulemaking also proposes new account

    aggregation standards, visibility regulations that are similar to

    current reporting obligations for large bona fide hedgers, and new

    regulations establishing requirements and standards for position limits

    and accountability rules that are implemented by registered entities.

    The Commission solicits comment on any aspect of the proposal. The

    Commission also solicits comment on particular issues throughout the

    preamble.

    DATES: Comments must be received on or before March 28, 2011.

    ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by RIN numbers 3038-AD15

    and 3038-AD16, 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.

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

    Follow instructions for submitting comments.

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

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

    www.cftc.gov. You should submit only information that you wish to make

    available publicly. If you wish the Commission to consider information

    that is exempt from disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act, a

    petition for confidential treatment of the exempt information may be

    submitted according to the procedure established in Sec. 145.9 of the

    Commission's regulations (17 CFR 145.9).

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

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

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

    inappropriate for publication, such as obscene language. All

    submissions that have been redacted or removed that contain comments on

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

    file and will be considered as required under the Administrative

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

    the Freedom of Information Act.

    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Stephen Sherrod, Acting Deputy

    Director, Market Surveillance, (202) 418-5452, ssherrod@cftc.gov, or

    Bruce Fekrat, Senior Special Counsel, Office of the Director, (202)

    418-5578, bfekrat@cftc.gov, Division of Market Oversight, Commodity

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

    NW., Washington, DC 20581.

    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

    I. Position Limits for Physical Commodity Futures and Swaps

    A. Background

    The Commodity Exchange Act (``CEA'' or ``Act'') of 1936,\1\ as

    amended by Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Act,\2\ includes provisions

    imposing clearing and trade execution requirements on standardized

    derivatives as well as comprehensive recordkeeping and reporting

    requirements that extend to all swaps, as defined in CEA section

    1a(47). Newly amended section 4a(a)(1) of the Act authorizes the

    Commission to extend position limits beyond futures and option

    contracts to swaps traded on a DCM or swap execution facility

    (``SEF''), swaps that are economically equivalent to DCM futures and

    option contracts with position limits, and swaps not traded on a DCM or

    SEF that perform or affect a significant price discovery function

    (``SPDF'') with respect to regulated entities. Further, new section

    4a(a)(5) of the Act requires aggregate position limits for swaps that

    are economically equivalent to DCM futures and option contracts with

    CFTC-set position limits. Similarly, new section 4a(a)(6) of the Act

    requires the Commission to apply position limits on an aggregate basis

    to contracts based on the same underlying commodity across: (1) DCMs;

    (2) with respect to foreign boards of trade (``FBOTs''), contracts that

    are price-linked to a DCM or SEF contract and made available from

    within the United States via direct access; and (3) SPDF swaps.

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

    \2\ See Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection

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

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

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    Sections 4a(a)(2)(B) and 4a(a)(3) of the Act charge the Commission

    with setting spot-month, single-month and all-months-combined limits

    for DCM futures and option contracts on exempt and agricultural

    commodities \3\ within 180 and 270 days, respectively, of the Dodd-

    Frank Act's enactment.\4\ In this notice of rulemaking, the Commission

    is proposing to establish limits required by Congress in amended CEA

    section 4a in two phases, which could involve multiple final

    regulations or different implementation dates.\5\ In the first

    [[Page 4753]]

    transitional phase the Commission proposes to establish spot-month

    position limits at the levels currently imposed by DCMs. This first

    phase would include related provisions, such as proposed regulation

    151.5, pertaining to bona fide hedging, and proposed Sec. 151.7,

    pertaining to account aggregation standards. During the second phase

    the Commission proposes to establish single-month and all-months-

    combined position limits and to set Commission-determined spot-month

    position limits.

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    \3\ Section 1a(20) of the Act defines the term ``exempt

    commodity'' to mean a commodity that is not an excluded commodity or

    an agricultural commodity. Section 1a(19) defines the term

    ``excluded commodity'' to mean, among other things, an interest

    rate, exchange rate, currency, credit risk or measure, debt or

    equity instrument, measure of inflation, or other macroeconomic

    index or measure. Although the term ``agricultural commodity'' is

    not defined in the Act, CEA section 1a(9) enumerates a non-exclusive

    list of agricultural commodities. The Commission issued a notice of

    rulemaking proposing a definition for the term ``agricultural

    commodity'' on October 26, 2010. 75 FR 65586. Although broadly

    defined, exempt commodity futures contracts are often viewed as

    energy and metals products.

    \4\ Section 737 of the Dodd-Frank Act, which amended section 4a

    of the Act, became effective on July 21, 2010.

    \5\ The Commission may implement the two phases in various ways.

    It may, for example, pursuant to this notice of proposed rulemaking,

    adopt a single final regulation with two implementation provisions,

    or it may adopt two separate final regulations.

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    As discussed in further detail below, phased implementation is

    possible because spot-month position limits are based on available

    information: DCMs currently set spot-month position limits based on

    their own estimates of deliverable supply. Spot-month limits can,

    therefore, be implemented by the Commission relatively expeditiously.

    In contrast, most non-spot-month position limits, as set by the

    Commission previously and as proposed herein, are based on open

    interest levels. Because the Commission was barred under the Commodity

    Futures Modernization Act of 2000 from collecting regular data or

    regulating most swaps markets, the Commission does not currently have

    the open interest and market structure data necessary to establish non-

    spot-month position limits. The Commission has proposed regulations

    that would permit it to gather positional data on physical commodity

    swaps on a regular basis.\6\

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    \6\ See Position Reports for Physical Commodity Swaps, 75 FR

    67258, November 2, 2010 (proposing position reports on economically

    equivalent swaps from clearing organizations, their members and swap

    dealers).

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    Because the Commission will not be able to implement a

    comprehensive system for gathering swap positional data for some time,

    this notice of proposed rulemaking does not propose to determine the

    numerical non-spot-month position limits for exempt and agricultural

    commodity derivatives resulting from the application of the open

    interest formulas in proposed Sec. 151.4. Rather, this notice of

    rulemaking provides for the determination of such limits when the

    Commission receives data regarding the levels of open interest in the

    swap markets to which these limits will apply.

    The Commission anticipates fixing initial position limits pursuant

    to the formulas proposed herein through the issuance of a Commission

    order. As proposed, CFTC-set position limits after the transitional

    period would be re-calculated every year based on the formulas set

    forth in proposed Sec. 151.4, subject to any changes to the formulas

    that may be proposed and adopted based on the Commission's surveillance

    of the markets for referenced contracts. In this regard, as discussed

    in further detail below, the proposed position visibility regulations,

    which would effectuate reporting requirements that are similar to

    current reporting requirements for large bona fide hedgers, may

    facilitate evaluating the efficacy and appropriateness of the proposed

    position limit framework if adopted.

    B. Statutory Authority

    1. Section 4a of the Act

    The Dodd-Frank Act preserves the Commission's broad authority to

    set position limits. Thus, for example, section 4a(a)(1) of the Act

    expressly permits the Commission to set ``different limits for, among

    other things, different commodities, markets, futures, or delivery

    months * * *'' Under new CEA section 4a(a)(7), the Commission also has

    authority to exempt persons or transactions from any position limits it

    establishes.

    New section 4a(a)(3) of the Act expressly directs the Commission to

    set such limits at levels that would serve, to the maximum extent

    practicable, in its discretion:

    (i) To diminish, eliminate, or prevent excessive speculation as

    described under this section;

    (ii) To deter and prevent market manipulation, squeezes, and

    corners;

    (iii) To ensure sufficient market liquidity for bona fide

    hedgers; and

    (iv) To ensure that the price discovery function of the

    underlying market is not disrupted.\7\

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    \7\ 7 U.S.C. 6a(a)(3).

    This provision incorporates the Commission's historical approach to

    setting limits, and is harmonious with the congressional directive in

    section 4a(a)(1) of the Act that the Commission set position limits to

    prevent or minimize price disruptions that could be caused by excessive

    speculative trading.

    Section 4a(a)(5) of the Act requires the Commission to develop,

    concurrently with position limits for DCM futures and option contracts,

    position limits for swaps that are economically equivalent to such

    contracts. Section 4a(a)(5) of the Act requires such position limits,

    when developed, to be adopted simultaneously.\8\ The defined term

    ``referenced contract'' in proposed Sec. 151.1, through its reference

    to the core futures contracts listed in proposed Sec. 151.2 (``core

    referenced futures contracts'' or ``151.2-listed contract''),

    identifies the ``economically equivalent'' derivatives that would be

    subject to the concurrent development, simultaneous establishment and

    aggregate implementation requirements of CEA section 4a. Referenced

    contracts are defined as derivatives (1) that are directly or

    indirectly linked to the price of a 151.2-listed contract, or (2) that

    are based on the price of the same commodity for delivery at the same

    location(s) as that of a 151.2-listed contract, or another delivery

    location with substantially the same supply and demand fundamentals as

    the delivery location of a 151.2-listed contract.\9\ The second part of

    the definition of referenced contract therefore proposes to include

    derivatives that are settled to a price series that is not based on,

    but is nonetheless highly correlated to, the price of a 151.2-listed

    contract. Proposed Sec. 151.2, in turn, enumerates 28 core physical

    delivery DCM futures contracts that would be subject to the

    Commission's proposed position limit framework. Generally, the 151.2-

    listed contracts were selected either because such contracts have high

    levels of open interest and significant notional value or because they

    otherwise may provide a reference price for a significant number of

    cash market transactions.\10\

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    \8\ Unlike swaps that are economically equivalent to DCM futures

    and option contracts with position limits, the Commission is not

    required to develop or establish position limits for SPDF swaps at

    the same time that it develops or establishes position limits for

    DCM futures and option contracts. The Commission intends to propose

    in a subsequent notice of rulemaking a process by which swaps that

    perform or affect a significant price discovery function with

    respect to regulated entities can be identified.

    \9\ 75 FR 67258, at 67260 (discussing the scope of directly and

    indirectly linked swaps).

    \10\ See 75 FR 67258, at 62758.

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    A primary mission of the CFTC is to foster fair, open and efficient

    functioning of the commodity derivatives markets.\11\ Critical to

    fulfilling this statutory mandate is protecting market users and the

    public from undue burdens that may result from ``excessive

    speculation.'' Specifically, section 4a of the Act, as amended by the

    Dodd-Frank Act, provides that:

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    \11\ See section 3 of the Act, 7 U.S.C. 5.

    ``Excessive speculation in any commodity under contracts of sale

    of such commodity for future delivery [(or swaps traded on or

    subject to the rules of a designated contract market or swap

    execution facility, or swaps that perform a significant price

    discovery function with respect to a registered entity)] * * *

    causing sudden or unreasonable fluctuations or unwarranted changes

    in the price of such commodity, is an undue and unnecessary burden

    on interstate commerce in such commodity. For the purpose of

    diminishing, eliminating, or preventing such

    [[Page 4754]]

    burden, the Commission shall * * * proclaim and fix such limits on

    the amount of trading which may be done or positions which may be

    held by any person * * * as the Commission finds are necessary to

    diminish, eliminate or prevent such burden. * * *'' \12\

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    \12\ Section 4a(a)(1) of the Act, 7 U.S.C. 6a(a)(1).

    Congress has declared that sudden or unreasonable price

    fluctuations attributable to ``excessive speculation'' create an

    ``undue and unnecessary burden'' on interstate commerce and directed

    that the Commission shall establish limits on the amounts of positions

    which may be held as it finds necessary to ``diminish, eliminate, or

    prevent'' such burden. As the plain reading of the statutory text

    indicates, the prevention of sudden or unreasonable changes in price

    attributable to large speculative positions, even without manipulative

    intent, is a congressionally-endorsed regulatory objective of the

    Commission.

    The Commission is not required to find that an undue burden on

    interstate commerce resulting from excessive speculation exists or is

    likely to occur in the future in order to impose position limits. Nor

    is the Commission required to make an affirmative finding that position

    limits are necessary to prevent sudden or unreasonable fluctuations or

    unwarranted changes in prices or otherwise necessary for market

    protection. Rather, the Commission may impose position limits

    prophylactically, based on its reasonable judgment that such limits are

    necessary for the purpose of ``diminishing, eliminating, or

    preventing'' such burdens on interstate commerce that the Congress has

    found result from excessive speculation. A more restrictive reading

    would be contrary to the congressional findings and objectives as

    embodied in section 4a of the Act.\13\

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    \13\ Consistent with the congressional findings and objectives,

    the Commission has previously set position limits without finding

    that an undue burden of interstate commerce has occurred or is

    likely to occur, and in so doing has expressly stated that such

    additional determinations by the Commission were not necessary in

    light of the congressional findings in section 4a of the Act. In its

    1981 rulemaking to require all exchanges to adopt position limits

    for commodities for which the Commission itself had not established

    limits, the Commission stated:

    ``As stated in the proposal, the prevention of large and/or

    abrupt price movements which are attributable to the extraordinarily

    large speculative positions is a congressionally endorsed regulatory

    objective of the Commission. Further, it is the Commission's view

    that this objective is enhanced by the speculative position limits

    since it appears that the capacity of any contract to absorb the

    establishment and liquidation of large speculative positions in an

    orderly manner is related to the relative size of such positions,

    i.e., the capacity of the market is not unlimited.''

    Establishment of Speculative Position Limits, 46 FR 50938, Oct.

    16, 1981 (adopting then regulation 1.61 (now part of regulation

    150.5)).

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    2. Legislative History and Discussion

    The relevant legislative history, including the congressional

    debates and studies preceding the enactment of the CEA, gives further

    evidence to the broad mandate conferred on the Commission pursuant to

    CEA section 4a. Throughout the 1920s and into the 1930s, a series of

    studies and reports found that large speculative positions in the

    futures markets for grain, even without manipulative intent, can cause

    ``disturbances'' and ``wild and erratic'' price fluctuations. To

    address such market disturbances, Congress was urged to adopt position

    limits to restrict speculative trading notwithstanding the absence of

    ``the deliberative purpose of manipulating the market.'' \14\ In 1936,

    based upon such reports and testimony, Congress provided the Commodity

    Exchange Authority (the predecessor of the Commission) with the

    authority to impose Federal speculative position limits. In doing so,

    Congress expressly acknowledged the potential for market disruptions

    resulting from excessive speculative trading and the need for measures

    to prevent or minimize such occurrence.\15\

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    \14\ See 7, U.S. Fed. Trade Commission, Report of the Federal

    Trade Commission on the Grain Trade: Effects of Future Trading 293-

    94 (1926). For example, the Federal Trade Commission concluded:

    The very large trader by himself may cause important

    fluctuations in the market. If he has the necessary resources,

    operations influenced by the idea that he has such power are bound

    to cause abnormal fluctuations in prices. Whether he is more often

    right than wrong and more often successful than unsuccessful, and

    whether influenced by a desire to manipulate or not, if he is large

    enough he can cause disturbances in the market which impair its

    proper functioning and are harmful to producers and consumers.

    The FTC recommended that limits be placed on trading,

    particularly on the amount of open interest that could be held by

    any one trader. Similarly, based on its study of price fluctuations

    in the wheat market, the Department of Agriculture urged Congress to

    provide the Grain Futures Administration (GFA), which had been

    created by the Grain Futures Act, with the authority to impose

    position limits. See Fluctuations in Wheat Futures, S. Doc. No. 69-

    135 (1st Sess. 1926); see also Speculative Position Limits in Energy

    Futures Markets: Hearing Before the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading

    Commission (July 28, 2009) (statement of Dan M. Berkovitz, General

    Counsel, U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission), available at

    http://www.cftc.gov/PressRoom/SpeechesTestimony/2009/berkovitzstatement072809.html.

    \15\ The report accompanying the 1935 bill that became the Act

    stated ``the fundamental purposes of the measure is to insure fair

    practice and honest dealing on the commodity exchanges and to

    provide a measure of control over those forms of speculative

    activity which too often demoralize the markets to the injury of

    producers and consumers and the exchanges themselves. H.R. Rep. No.

    74-421, at 1 (1935), accompanying H.R. 6772.

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    The basic statutory mandate in section 4a of the Act to establish

    position limits to prevent ``undue burdens'' associated with

    ``excessive speculation'' has remained unchanged--and has been

    reaffirmed by Congress several times--over the past seven decades. In

    1974, when Congress created the Commission as an independent regulatory

    agency, it reiterated the purpose of the Act to prevent fraud and

    manipulation and to control speculation.\16\ In connection with another

    major overhaul of the Act, the Commodity Futures Modernization Act of

    2000, Congress expressly authorized exchanges to use position

    accountability as an alternative means to limit speculative positions.

    However, Congress did not alter the Commission's mandate in CEA section

    4a to establish position limits to prevent such undue burdens on

    interstate commerce. Then, in the CFTC Reauthorization Act of

    [[Page 4755]]

    2008,\17\ Congress, among other things, expanded the Commission's

    authority to set position limits to significant price discovery

    contracts on exempt commercial markets.

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    \16\ S. Rep. No. 93-1131, 93rd Cong., 2d Sess. (1974).

    \17\ Food, Conservation and Energy Act of 2008, Public Law 110-

    246, 122 Stat. 1624 (June 18, 2008).

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    Finally, as outlined above, pursuant to the Dodd-Frank Act,

    Congress significantly expanded the Commission's authority and mandate

    to establish position limits beyond futures and option contracts to

    include, for example, economically equivalent derivatives.\18\ Congress

    expressly directed the Commission to set limits in accordance with the

    standards set forth in sections 4a(a)(1) and 4a(a)(3) of the Act,\19\

    thereby reaffirming the Commission's authority to establish position

    limits as it finds necessary in its discretion to address excessive

    speculation.\20\ As noted earlier, section 4a(a)(3) of the Act

    expressly sets forth the Commission's broad discretion in setting

    position limits under section 4a(a)(1), and the necessary

    considerations in setting such limits. Section 4a(a)(3) effectively

    incorporates the Commission's historical approach to setting

    limits,\21\ and is harmonious with the congressional directive in

    section 4a(a)(1) of the Act that the Commission set position limits in

    its discretion to prevent or minimize burdens that could be caused by

    excessive speculative trading.

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    \18\ Dodd-Frank Act, Public Law 111-203, 737, 124 Stat. 1376

    (2010). The Dodd-Frank Act amendments to section 4a of the Act

    became effective upon the date of enactment of the Dodd-Frank Act.

    \19\ Section 4a(a)(2) of the Act provides that the Commission,

    in setting position limits, must do so in accordance with the

    standards set forth in CEA section 4a(a)(1). 7 U.S.C. 6a(a)(2).

    \20\ Senator Lincoln (then the Chair to the Senate Agriculture

    Committee) stated that amended section 4a ``will grant broad

    authority to the [Commission] to once and for all set aggregate

    position limits across all markets on non-commercial market

    participants * * * I believe the adoption of aggregate position

    limits will help bring some normalcy back to our markets and reduce

    some of the volatility we have witnessed over the last few years.''

    156 Cong. Rec. S5919 (daily ed. July 15, 2010) (statement of Sen.

    Lincoln).

    \21\ See 46 FR 50938.

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    Large concentrated positions in the physical commodity markets can

    potentially facilitate price distortions given that the capacity of any

    market to absorb the establishment and liquidation of large positions

    in an orderly manner is related to the size of such positions relative

    to the market and the market's structure and is, therefore, not

    unlimited.\22\ Concentration of large positions in one or a few

    traders' accounts can also create the unwarranted appearance of

    appreciable liquidity and market depth which, in fact, may not exist.

    Trading under such conditions can result in sudden changes to commodity

    prices that would otherwise not prevail if traders' positions were more

    evenly distributed among market participants.\23\ Position limits

    address these risks through ensuring the participation of a minimum

    number of traders that are independent of each other and have different

    trading objectives and strategies.

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    \22\ See Fluctuations in Wheat Futures, S. Doc. No. 69-135 (1st

    Sess. 1926); and 7 U.S. Fed. Trade Commission, Report of the Federal

    Trade Commission on the Grain Trade: Effects of Future Trading 293-

    94 (1926); see also Thomas A. Hieronymus, Economics of Futures

    Trading 313 (1971) (``Limits on speculative positions have met with

    a high degree of trade acceptance and only recently has the size of

    some of the limits began to be called into question. The general

    notion is that no one man should be allowed to have such a position

    or trade in such volume that he could push the price around with his

    sheer bulk'').

    \23\ By way of illustration, after the silver futures market

    crisis during late 1979 to early 1980, commonly referred to as ``the

    Hunt Brothers silver manipulation,'' the Commission concluded that

    ``[t]he recent events in silver suggest that the capacity of any

    futures market to absorb large positions in an orderly manner is not

    unlimited.'' Subsequently, the Commission adopted regulation 1.61,

    which required all exchanges to adopt and submit for Commission

    approval position limits in active futures markets for which no

    exchange or Commission limits were then in effect. More recently,

    Congress, in response to high prices and volatility in commodity

    prices generally, and energy prices in particular, extended the

    Commission's authority to set limits to significant price discovery

    contracts traded on exempt commercial markets. Food, Conservation

    and Energy Act of 2008, Public Law 110-246, 122 Stat. 1624 (June 18,

    2008).

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    The Commission currently sets and enforces position limits with

    respect to certain agricultural products. For metals and energy

    commodities, in 1981 the Commission began to require exchange-set

    limits, with a Commission approval process, for any active futures

    markets without existing Commission or exchange limits.\24\ This

    framework was significantly scaled back in 1991, after which the

    Commission began to approve exchange accountability provisions in place

    of position limits.\25\ Such accountability provisions took effect with

    respect to certain metals derivatives in 1992, and with respect to

    energy and soft agricultural derivatives in 2001. Currently, the

    Commission authorizes DCMs to set position limits and accountability

    rules to protect against manipulation and congestion and price

    distortions. The proliferation of economically-equivalent instruments

    trading in multiple trading venues, however, warrants extension of the

    Commission-set position limits beyond agricultural products to metals

    and energy commodities. The Commission anticipates that this market

    trend will continue as, consistent with the regulatory structure

    established by the Dodd-Frank Act, economically equivalent derivatives

    based on exempt and agricultural commodities are executed pursuant to

    the rules of multiple DCMs and SEFs and other Commission registrants.

    Under these circumstances, uniform position limits should be

    established across such venues to prevent regulatory arbitrage and

    ensure a level playing field for all trading venues. Because it has the

    authority to gather data and impose regulations across trading venues,

    the Commission is uniquely situated to establish uniform position

    limits and related requirements for all economically equivalent

    derivatives.\26\ A uniform approach would also encourage better risk

    management and could reduce systemic risk. Despite centralized clearing

    arrangements employed by DCMs to reduce systemic risk, a levered market

    participant can still take a very large speculative position across

    multiple venues. The proposed position limit framework would reduce the

    ability of such levered entities to take such positions and to cause

    systemic risk.

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    \24\ 46 FR 50938.

    \25\ See Speculative Position Limits--Exemptions from Commission

    Rule 1.61, 56 FR 51687, October 15, 1991; and Speculative Position

    Limits--Exemptions from Commission Rule 1.61, 57 FR 29064, June 30,

    1992.

    \26\ Because individual markets have knowledge of positions on

    their own facilities, it is difficult for them to assess the full

    impact of a trader's positions on the greater market.

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    As noted above, in setting position limits to guard against

    excessive speculation, the Commission, pursuant to the factors

    enumerated in section 4a(a)(3) of the Act, has endeavored to maximize

    the objectives of preventing excessive speculation, deterring and

    preventing market manipulation, and ensuring that markets remain

    sufficiently liquid so as to afford end users and producers of

    commodities the ability to hedge commercial risks and to promote

    efficient price discovery.

    C. Public Comments in Advance of Commission Action

    As with other forthcoming notices of rulemaking proposing

    regulations to implement the Dodd-Frank Act, the Commission accepted

    public comments in advance of issuing this release. The Commission has

    received approximately 350 public comments as of December 16, 2010.\27\

    The Commission has reviewed these comments and considered them in

    drafting the

    [[Page 4756]]

    proposed regulations. The majority of commenters submitted letters

    advocating the view that position limits should be set at one percent

    of the total annual world production for a given commodity. Several

    expressed views on a single issue, notably the importance of preventing

    market manipulation.

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

    \27\ These comments may be accessed at http://www.cftc.gov/LawRegulation/DoddFrankAct/OTC_26_PosLimits.html.

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

    The view most commonly expressed by certain other commenters,

    including the CME Group, Electric Power Supply Association, Futures

    Industry Association, Morgan Stanley, and National Gas Supply

    Association, was opposition to a provision that resulted in the

    ``crowding out'' of speculative positions. A ``crowding out'' provision

    would have limited the ability of a trader that hedges or acts as a

    swap dealer to take on speculative positions once certain positional

    thresholds were exceeded.\28\ A concern raised by the commenters was

    related to the unintended consequence of excluding knowledgeable

    traders, or traders that needed to hold speculative positions, from the

    commodity derivatives markets. The Commission has determined to not

    propose a ``crowding out'' provision at this time.

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

    \28\ See Federal Speculative Position Limits for Referenced

    Energy Contracts and Associated Regulations, 75 FR 4144, at 4146,

    January 26, 2010, withdrawn 75 FR 50950, August 18, 2010.

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

    Several commenters addressed bona fide hedging exemptions to

    position limits. Some of these commenters, for example the CME Group,

    presented the view that the Commission should adopt a broad definition

    for bona fide positions that would cover ``all non-speculative''

    positions. Morgan Stanley recommended that the Commission ``exercise

    its discretion to interpret [s]ection 4(a)(c)(2), including the term

    `economically appropriate', broadly to permit products and services

    similar to [risk management products offered by swap dealers] to

    qualify as bona fide hedging transactions or positions.'' The National

    Grain and Feed Association (``NGFA'') presented the view that the

    Commission ``should use its authority to grant hedge exemptions to

    financial institutions, index funds, hedge funds or other

    nontraditional participants in agricultural futures markets extremely

    sparingly and only if it can be demonstrated clearly that such

    exemptions will not harm contract performance for traditional

    hedgers.'' The NGFA further recommended that the Commission ```look

    through' swap transactions and allow hedge exemptions to be granted

    only for that portion of swap dealers' business where the swap dealers'

    counterparties are entities that otherwise would have qualified for a

    hedge exemption.'' The Commission has seriously considered these views

    on the bona fide hedging exemption in light of the express language of

    the Act. The Commission has accordingly determined to propose a

    definition of bona fide hedging in proposed Sec. 151.5(a)(1)(iv) that

    provides for an exemption for a non-bona fide swap counterparty only if

    such swap transaction or position represents cash market transactions

    and offsets its bona fide counterparty's cash market risks.

    Several commenters, including the CME Group, Electric Power Supply

    Association, Futures Industry Association, GDF Suez Energy, Morgan

    Stanley, and NextEra Energy Power Marketing, expressed concerns

    relating to the potential for overly strict account aggregation

    standards. The aggregation standards of the proposed regulations

    attempt to address some of these concerns by including exemptions for

    passive investments in independently controlled and managed commercial

    entities as well as exemptions for certain positions held with futures

    commission merchants and for traders that are passive pool

    participants. The law firm Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP, on

    behalf of a commodity trading advisor, specifically argued for the

    retention of the independent account controller exemption currently in

    force in part 150 of the Commission's regulations, echoing the views of

    numerous commenters to the January 2010 proposed rulemaking for

    position limits on certain energy contracts. As explained in more

    detail in the aggregation section of this preamble, the proposed

    regulations address the concern of not having an independent account

    controller exemption by establishing the owned non-financial entity

    exemption. Some commenters, for example the Electric Power Supply

    Association, Futures Industry Association and Morgan Stanley, argued

    that aggregation should be based solely on common control, with no

    consideration given to common ownership. At this time, the Commission

    does not see sufficient justification to change its longstanding

    approach of considering both control and ownership in its aggregation

    policy. The traditional ten percent ownership standard has proven to be

    a useful measure in conjunction with the control standard. In addition,

    the proposed owned non-financial entity exemption addresses situations

    in which the 10 percent ownership standard has been exceeded but a lack

    of common control over trading decisions and strategies warrants

    disaggregation.

    The CME Group also argued that position limits should not be

    imposed until the Commission has gathered sufficient data on the

    physical commodity swap markets. In order to address similar concerns,

    the Commission proposed regulations in November 2010 that are

    specifically designed to gather positional data on physical commodity

    swaps.\29\ The Commission anticipates the collection of positional data

    to begin during the third quarter of 2011. Furthermore, the Commission

    is proposing to fix specific position limits pursuant to formulas

    proposed herein (and making other aspects of the proposed regulations

    effective) only after collecting positional data on physical commodity

    swaps and through the issuance of a Commission order during the first

    quarter of 2012, unless the Commission determines that there are

    certain commodities for which data is sufficient to implement limits

    sooner.

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

    \29\ See 75 FR 67258.

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

    In addition to review and consideration of public comments,

    Commission staff has held 32 meetings with a variety of market

    participants, including bona fide hedgers, swap dealers, hedge funds

    and several industry groups, to discuss position limits and in

    particular to gather information about the potential impact of

    limits.\30\ The Commission has considered information obtained in these

    meetings in drafting the proposed regulations.

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

    \30\ The Commission has made public all meetings that Commission

    staff has held with outside organizations in connection with the

    implementation of the Dodd-Frank Act, including, for each meeting, a

    list of attendees and a summary of the meeting. This information may

    be accessed at http://www.cftc.gov/LawRegulation/DoddFrankAct/ExternalMeetings/otc_meetings.html.

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

    II. The Proposed Regulations

    A. Spot-Month Position Limits

    The Commission proposes definitions in Sec. 151.3 that identify

    the spot month \31\ for referenced contracts in the same commodity that

    would be subject to the proposed position limit framework. These

    definitions reference the dates on which a spot month commences and

    terminates. The definitions for the spot period are based on existing

    spot-month definitions set forth by DCMs for 151.2-listed contracts.

    These periods, as defined by the Commission, would

    [[Page 4757]]

    continue into the delivery period for the core referenced futures

    contracts, which in turn determine the spot month for all referenced

    contracts in the same commodity.

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

    \31\ The term ``spot month'' does not refer to a month of time.

    Rather, it is the trading period immediately preceding the delivery

    period for a physically-delivered futures contract and cash-settled

    swaps and futures contracts that are linked to the physically-

    delivered contract. The length of this period may thus vary

    depending on the referenced contract, as described in proposed

    regulation 151.3.

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

    With three exceptions, the 151.2-listed contracts with DCM-defined

    spot months are currently subject to exchange-set spot-month position

    limits.\32\ Proposed Sec. 151.4 would impose and aggregately apply

    spot-month position limits for the referenced contracts. Consistent

    with the Commission's longstanding policy regarding the appropriate

    level of spot-month limits for physical delivery contracts, these

    position limits would be set at 25 percent of estimated deliverable

    supply. The spot-month limits would be adjusted annually thereafter.

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

    \32\ The only contracts based on a physical commodity that

    currently do not have spot-month limits are the COMEX mini-sized

    gold, silver, and copper contracts that are cash-settled based on

    the futures settlement prices of the physical-delivery contracts.

    The cash-settled contracts have position accountability provisions

    in the spot month rather than outright spot-month limits. These

    cash-settled contracts have relatively small levels of open

    interest.

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

    The proposed deliverable supply formula narrowly targets the

    trading that may be most susceptible to, or likely to facilitate, price

    disruptions. The formula seeks to minimize the potential for corners

    and squeezes by facilitating the orderly liquidation of positions as

    the market approaches the end of trading and by restricting the swap

    positions which may be used to influence the price of referenced

    contracts that are executed centrally. Referenced contracts that are

    based on the price of the same commodity but where delivery is at a

    location that is different than the delivery location of a 151.2-listed

    contract would not be subject to the proposed Federal spot-month

    position limit. Because the potential incentive and ability to

    manipulate the spot-month delivery process to benefit a derivatives

    position providing for delivery at a different delivery location is

    less, Federal spot-month limits would apply only to futures, options

    and swaps that are directly price-linked to a 151.2-listed core

    referenced contract or that settle to a price series that prices the

    same commodity at the same delivery location. Finally, the proposed

    spot-month limits would apply on an aggregate basis, thereby subjecting

    these economically equivalent derivatives to the same spot-month

    limits, whether or not they are listed for trading on a DCM, cleared,

    or uncleared.

    Proposed Sec. 151.4 would apply spot-month position limits

    separately for physically-delivered contracts and all cash-settled

    contracts, including cash-settled futures and swaps. A trader may

    therefore have up to the spot-month position limit in both the

    physically-delivered and cash-settled contracts. For example, if the

    spot-month limit for a referenced contract is 1,000 contracts, then a

    trader may hold up to 1,000 contracts long in the physically-delivered

    contract and 1,000 contracts long in the cash-settled contract. A

    trader's cash-settled contract position would separately be a function

    of the trader's position in referenced contracts based on the same

    commodity that are cash-settled futures and swaps.\33\

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

    \33\ For purposes of applying the limits, a trader would convert

    and aggregate positions in swaps on a futures equivalent basis.

    Guidance on futures equivalency is provided in Appendix A to the

    Commission's proposed part 20 rulemaking on position reports for

    physical commodity swaps. 75 FR 67258, at 67269.

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

    The proposed spot-month position limit formula is based on the

    Commission's longstanding approach to setting and overseeing spot-month

    limits and is consistent with industry practice and the goals of

    preventing manipulation through corners or squeezes. Core Principles 3

    and 5 for DCMs address congressional concerns regarding potential

    manipulation of the futures market, and the Commission has typically

    evaluated compliance with these core principles in tandem. Core

    Principle 3 specifies that a board of trade shall list only contracts

    that are not readily susceptible to manipulation, while Core Principle

    5 obligates a DCM to establish position limits and position

    accountability provisions where necessary and appropriate ``to reduce

    the threat of market manipulation or congestion, especially during the

    delivery month.''

    In determining whether a physical delivery contract complies with

    Core Principle 3, the Commission considers whether the specified terms

    and conditions, considered as a whole, result in a deliverable supply

    that is sufficient to ensure that the contract is not conducive to

    price manipulation or distortion. In general, the term ``deliverable

    supply'' means the quantity of the commodity meeting a derivative

    contract's delivery specifications that can reasonably be expected to

    be readily available to short traders and saleable by long traders at

    its market value in normal cash marketing channels at the derivative

    contract's delivery points during the specified delivery period,

    barring abnormal movement in interstate commerce. The establishment of

    a spot-month limit pursuant to Core Principle 5 is made based on the

    analysis of deliverable supplies, and the Acceptable Practices for this

    Core Principle state that, for physically delivered contracts, the

    spot-month limit should not exceed 25 percent of the estimated

    deliverable supply. Likewise, the guidance for DCMs in Commission Sec.

    150.5(b) provides that for physical delivery contracts, the spot-month

    limit level must be no greater than 25 percent of the estimated spot-

    month deliverable supply, calculated separately for each month to be

    listed.

    In Sec. 151.4, the Commission proposes spot-month limits, for not

    only referenced contracts that are futures but also referenced

    contracts that are economically equivalent swaps, that would, during

    the initial implementation period, be set at the spot-month limit

    levels determined by DCMs to be equal to 25 percent of estimated

    deliverable supply.\34\ In the second phase of implementation, these

    spot-month limits would be based on 25 percent of estimated deliverable

    supply as determined by the Commission, which could choose to adopt

    exchange-provided estimates or, for example, in the case of

    inconsistent estimates from exchanges, issue its own estimates.

    Pursuant to current exchange procedures for updating the spot-month

    limits, exchanges initially establish and periodically update their

    limits through rule amendments that are filed with the Commission under

    self-certification or approval procedures. As part of the initial

    filing, or in response to subsequent inquiries from the Commission, the

    exchanges provide information showing how the spot-month limits comply

    with the Commission's regulations and acceptable practices.

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

    \34\ For the ICE Futures U.S. Sugar No. 16 (SF) and Chicago

    Mercantile Exchange Class III Milk (DA), the Commission proposes to

    adopt the DCM single-month limits for the nearby month or first-to-

    expire referenced contract as spot-month limits. These contracts

    currently have single-month limits which are enforced in the spot

    month.

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

    With respect to the existing spot-month limits that currently are

    in effect for referenced contracts, the Commission notes that,

    irrespective of the manner in which a rule amendment is filed (by self-

    certification or for approval), Commission staff currently evaluates

    the limits for compliance with the requirements of Core Principle 5 and

    the criteria set out in the Commission's Acceptable Practices. For

    physically delivered contracts, staff evaluates the information

    supplied by the exchange and other available information regarding the

    underlying commodity to ensure that the spot-month limit does not

    exceed 25 percent of the estimated deliverable supplies. For cash-

    settled

    [[Page 4758]]

    contracts, staff evaluates the information supplied by the exchanges

    and independently assesses the nature of the market underlying the

    cash-settlement calculation, including the depth and breadth of trading

    in that market, to determine the ability of a trader to exert market

    power and influence the cash-settlement price, with the aim of having a

    spot-month limit level that effectively limits a trader's incentive to

    exercise such market power.

    With respect to cash-settled contracts, proposed Sec. 151.4

    incorporates a conditional-spot-month limit that permits traders

    without a hedge exemption to acquire position levels that are five

    times the spot-month limit if such positions are exclusively in cash-

    settled contracts and the trader holds physical commodity positions

    that are less than or equal to 25 percent of the estimated deliverable

    supply. The proposed limit maximizes the objectives, enumerated in

    section 4a(a)(3) of the Act, of deterring manipulation and excessive

    speculation while ensuring market liquidity and efficient price

    discovery by establishing a higher limit for cash-settled contracts as

    long as such positions are decoupled from large physical commodity

    holdings and the positions in physical delivery contracts which set or

    affect the value of cash-settled positions. The conditional-spot-month

    position limit generally tracks exchange-set position limits currently

    implemented for certain cash-settled energy futures and swaps. For

    example, the NYMEX Henry Hub Natural Gas Last Day Financial Swap, the

    NYMEX Henry Hub Natural Gas Look-Alike Last Day Financial Futures, and

    the ICE Henry LD1 swap are all cash-settled contracts subject to a

    conditional-spot-month limit that, with the exception of the

    requirement that a trader not hold large cash commodity positions, is

    identical in structure to the limit proposed herein.

    This proposed conditional spot-month position limit formula is

    consistent with Commission guidance. The Acceptable Practices for Core

    Principle 5 state that a spot-month position limit may be necessary if

    the underlying cash market is small or illiquid such that traders can

    disrupt the cash market or otherwise influence the cash-settlement

    price to profit on a futures position. In these cases, the limit should

    be set at a level that minimizes the potential for manipulation or

    distortion of the futures contract or the underlying commodity's price.

    With respect to cash-settled contracts where the underlying product is

    a physical commodity with limited supplies where a trader can exert

    market power (including agricultural and exempt commodities), the

    Commission has viewed the specification of a spot-month limit to be an

    essential term and condition of such contracts in order to ensure that

    they are not readily susceptible to manipulation, which is the Core

    Principle 3 requirement, and to satisfy the requirements of Core

    Principle 5 and the Acceptable Practices thereunder. In practice, for

    cash-settled contracts on agricultural and exempt commodities where a

    trader's market power is of concern, the practice has been to set the

    spot-month limit at some percentage of calculated deliverable supply.

    Limiting a trader's position at the expiration of cash-settled

    contracts diminishes the incentive to exert market power to manipulate

    the cash-settlement price or index to advantage a trader's position in

    the cash-settlement contract. Accordingly, the Commission has viewed

    the presence of a spot-month speculative limit as a key feature of such

    cash-settlement contracts, along with the design of the cash-settlement

    index, in ensuring that such contracts are not readily susceptible to

    manipulation and thus satisfy the requirements of Core Principles 3 and

    5.

    In view of the above, the Commission generally has required that,

    to comply with Core Principles 3 and 5, all futures contracts based on

    agricultural or exempt commodities, because they have finite supplies

    and are subject to price distortion and manipulation, must have a spot-

    month limits, irrespective of whether the contract specifies physical

    delivery or cash settlement. In addition, the establishment of position

    limits on swaps is consistent with congressional guidance in the CFTC

    Reauthorization Act of 2008.\35\ That legislation amended the CEA by,

    among other things, adding core principles in new section 2(h)(7)

    governing swaps that were significant price discovery contracts traded

    on electronic trading facilities operating in reliance on the exemption

    in section 2(h)(3) of the Act. The 2008 legislation amended the Act to

    impose certain self-regulatory responsibilities with respect to such

    swaps through core principles, including a core principle that required

    the adoption of position limits or position accountability levels where

    necessary and appropriate. The CFTC Reauthorization Act, thus,

    recognized the appropriateness of treating certain swaps and futures

    contracts in the same manner, thereby authorizing the imposition of

    position limits on such swaps (which are cash-settled contracts).

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

    \35\ Food, Conservation and Energy Act of 2008, Public Law 110-

    246, 122 Stat. 1624 (June 18, 2008).

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

    In order to facilitate the annual calculations of spot-month

    position limits, the Commission proposes to require each DCM that lists

    a referenced physical delivery contract to submit, on an annual basis,

    an estimate of deliverable supply to the Commission. This estimate

    would include supplies that are available through standard marketing

    channels at market prices prevailing during the relevant spot months.

    Deliverable supply would not include supplies that could be procured at

    unreasonably high prices or diverted from non-standard locations.

    Deliverable supply would also not include supply that is committed for

    long-term agreements and would therefore not be available to fulfill

    the delivery obligations arising from current trading. The Commission

    would consider the DCM's estimate in conjunction with analyzing its own

    data and reviewing position limit related DCM filings, and make a final

    determination as to deliverable supply. In making this determination,

    the Commission would weigh more heavily the highest monthly values of

    past deliverable supply, provided it did not occur in particularly

    unusual market conditions, over a reasonable time period to estimate

    the largest deliverable supply.

    The Commission invites comments on all aspects of its proposed

    spot-month position limit framework. For example, how broadly or

    narrowly should the Commission consider what constitutes deliverable

    supply? Should the Commission adopt the proposed conditional-spot-month

    limits or adopt a uniform spot-month limit? Alternatively, should the

    conditional-spot-month limit be set at a higher level relative to the

    level of deliverable supply? If so, why?

    B. Non-Spot-Month Position Limits

    1. Open Interest Formula

    While the Commission proposes to set spot-month limits in the

    transitional implementation period, the Commission would impose non-

    spot-month position limits only in the second phase of implementation.

    In contrast to spot-month position limits which are set as a function

    of deliverable supply, the class and aggregate single-month and all-

    months-combined position limits, as proposed, would be tied to a

    specific percentage of overall open interest for a particular

    referenced contract in the aggregate or on a per class basis. Under the

    proposed regulations, there are two classes of contracts in connection

    with

    [[Page 4759]]

    non-spot-month limits. One class is comprised of all futures and option

    contracts executed pursuant to the rules of a DCM. The second class is

    comprised of all swaps.

    In addition to an aggregate single-month and all-months-combined

    position limit that would apply across classes, the proposed

    regulations would apply single-month and all-months-combined position

    limits to each class separately. Class limits would ensure that market

    power is not concentrated in any one submarket, and that a trader is

    not flat in the aggregate while holding excessively large offsetting

    positions in any one submarket. Class and aggregate position limits

    based on a percentage of open interest may help prevent any single

    speculative trader from acquiring excessive market power. The formula

    proposed herein is intended to ensure that no single speculator can

    constitute more than 10 percent of a market, as measured by open

    interest, up to 25,000 contracts of open interest, and 2.5 percent

    thereafter.\36\

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

    \36\ See Revision of Federal Speculative Position Limits, 57 FR

    12766, April 13, 1992; and Revision of Federal Speculative Position

    Limits and Associated Rules, 64 FR 24038, at 24039, May 5, 1999.

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

    Proposed Sec. 151.4 proposes to use the futures position limits

    formula (the 10, 2.5 percent formula) to determine non-spot-month

    position limits for referenced contracts. The 10, 2.5 percent formula

    is identified in current Commission Sec. 150.5(c)(2). Given the level

    of open interest in the futures markets and the likely level of open

    swaps based on data available to the Commission, this formula would

    yield high position limits that nonetheless would prevent a speculative

    trader from acquiring excessively large positions and thereby would

    help prevent excessive speculation and deter and prevent market

    manipulation, squeezes, and corners. The resultant limits are purposely

    designed to be high in order to ensure sufficient liquidity for bona

    fide hedgers and avoid disrupting the price discovery process given the

    limited information the Commission has with respect to the size of the

    physical commodity swap markets.\37\

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

    \37\ See 57 FR 12766, at 12771.

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

    As discussed further below, for the agricultural futures contracts

    enumerated in current Sec. 150.2, the Commission is proposing legacy

    limits that would retain the all-months-combined limits for such

    contracts and would make the single-month limits equal to the all-

    months-combined limits.

    The Commission emphasizes that market data can support a range of

    acceptable speculative position limits. The Commission currently

    obtains DCM futures and option positional data under parts 15 through

    19 and 21 of its regulations, which derive their statutory authority in

    significant part from sections 4a, 4g and 4i of the CEA. With regard to

    swaps, the Commission receives limited positional data for cleared

    swaps that are significant price discovery contracts under part 36 of

    its regulations and limited positional data on certain swaps that are

    cleared, but not traded, by registered derivatives clearing

    organizations. While the Commission requires additional, reliable, and

    verifiable swaps data to enforce the position limits proposed herein,

    the Commission believes that it has sufficient data to set the overall

    concentration-based percentages for the position limits. The Commission

    intends to finalize regulations that would provide it with

    comprehensive positional data on physical commodity swaps, and would

    use such data to fix numerical position limits through the application

    of the proposed open-interest-based position limit formula.\38\

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

    \38\ See 75 FR 67258.

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

    The trader visibility requirements of Sec. 151.6, as described

    below, establish levels that trigger reporting requirements similar to

    reports that certain hedgers currently submit pursuant to '04 reports

    under part 19 of the Commission's regulations. These reporting

    requirements aim to make the physical and derivatives portfolios of the

    largest traders in referenced contracts visible to the Commission. This

    information would generally allow the Commission to understand large

    traders' trading activities and to assess the appropriateness of the

    speculative position limits set forth in the proposed part 151. The

    Commission would then potentially be able to, among other things, more

    readily identify instances where a trader's large positions create an

    ability to manipulate the market and cause sudden price changes or

    distortions. Moreover, the position visibility-related reports could

    potentially enable the Commission to perform some econometric analyses

    of the impact of speculative positions on price formation in referenced

    contracts. The position visibility levels that trigger reporting

    obligations are not intended to function as safe harbors from any

    charge of manipulation or excessive speculation. Visibility levels are

    in no way intended to imply that positions at or near such levels

    cannot constitute excessive speculation or be used to manipulate prices

    or for other wrongful purposes.

    The Commission solicits comment as to whether the traditional 10,

    2.5 percent formula should be uniformly applied to all referenced

    contracts as is being proposed. If not, why? In particular, given that

    single-month and all-months-combined position limits are not currently

    in place for energy and metals markets, should the Commission consider

    setting limits initially on these commodities at some higher level,

    such as a 10, 5 percent formula based on open interest, in order to

    best ensure that hedging activities or price discovery are not

    negatively affected? With respect to class limits, the Commission

    specifically solicits comment on whether additional classes, such as

    separate class categories for cleared and uncleared swaps, should be

    adopted to ensure that large positions that result in excessive

    concentration of positions in a submarket are not acquired?

    2. Calculation of Open Interest

    Under the proposed position limit framework, there are six possible

    non-spot-month position limits: Aggregate all-months-combined and

    single-month limits; futures class all-months-combined and single-month

    limits; and swaps class all-months-combined and single-month limits. In

    each case, single-month limits are proposed to equal all-months-

    combined limit levels. The Commission is proposing this approach in

    order to lessen the complexity of the limits and hence compliance

    burdens. The Commission is also proposing this approach, which would

    result in higher single-month limits, to incorporate a calendar spread

    exemption within the single-month limits (including an across crop year

    spread exemption) and remove the calendar spread exemption which would

    no longer be needed.

    As discussed above, the Commission proposes to set non-spot-month

    position limits as a function of open interest. The general formula

    would set non-spot-month position limits as the sum of 10 percent of

    the first 25,000 contracts of open interest base and 2.5 percent of the

    open interest base beyond 25,000 contracts. All open interest base

    calculations would be derived from month-end open interest values. The

    open interest bases would be utilized to determine the average all-

    months-combined open interest which, in turn, would be the basis for

    the six non-spot-month position limits. Under proposed Sec. 151.4(e),

    the average all-months-combined open interest would be the average of

    the relevant all-months open interest base for a calendar year. The

    open interest base levels would be

    [[Page 4760]]

    calculated in the same manner described in the Commission's January

    2010 release proposing position limits for certain referenced energy

    contracts.\39\

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

    \39\ See 75 FR 4144, at 4153. A list of contracts that

    illustrate how open interest values would be calculated is available

    at http://www.cftc.gov/LawRegulation/DoddFrankAct/Rulemakings/DF_26_PosLimits/index.htm. The list enumerates the types of referenced

    contracts' open interest that would roll up into a 151.2-listed

    contract's open interest for the purpose of determining overall open

    interest levels. Once swap open interest data for swaps that are

    referenced contracts is collected, the open interest value for such

    swaps would also be rolled up into the related 151.2-listed futures

    contract's open interest along with the open interest of other

    related referenced contracts.

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

    Cleared referenced swap contract open interest would be based on

    month-end open interest figures provided to the Commission by clearing

    organizations. The Commission proposes to determine the uncleared swap

    open interest based on the month-end average for the sum of swap dealer

    positions in all months in uncleared referenced swap contracts. In

    order to determine a swap dealer's position in all months in uncleared

    referenced swap contracts, the Commission would undertake a four-step

    process. First, the Commission would determine a single swap dealer's

    net exposure by counterparty by referenced contract month. Second, the

    Commission would add the swap dealer's net counterparty exposures in

    the same referenced contract month on an absolute basis to determine

    the swap dealer's open interest for the referenced contract single

    month. Third, the Commission would combine the swap dealer's positions

    in the referenced contract month in order to determine its contribution

    to the uncleared swap single-month open interest. Finally, the

    Commission would combine the swap dealer's positions in single

    referenced contract months. At month end, this sum would constitute

    that swap dealer's contribution to the uncleared referenced swap

    contract all-months open interest (and the aggregate all-months

    referenced contract open interest). For example, a swap dealer with the

    following referenced contract portfolio would contribute 2,000

    contracts to the all-months uncleared swap open interest, 1,000 from

    each counterparty, based on positions of 1,100, 500, and 400 contracts

    for the January, February, and March referenced single contract months

    respectively:

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

    Net position January Net position February Net position March

    referenced contract referenced contract referenced contract

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

    Counterparty 1....................... -600 -200 -200

    Counterparty 2....................... +500 -300 -200

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

    3. Legacy Position Limits

    The proposed regulations would retain the all-months-combined

    position limits for enumerated agricultural commodities in current

    Sec. 150.2 as an exception to the general open interest based formula.

    The single-month limit would be increased to the same level as the

    legacy all-months-combined limit, with the elimination of the calendar

    month spread exemption.

    The Commission requests comment on whether the legacy position

    limits should be retained or treated as other derivatives are treated

    under this proposal, and if so, whether the levels should be increased,

    to the following amounts requested in an April 6, 2010 petition to the

    Commission by the Chicago Board of Trade \40\:

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

    \40\ CME Group Petition for Amendment of Commodity Futures

    Trading Commission Regulation (April 6, 2010), available at http://www.cftc.gov/LawRegulation/DoddFrankAct/Rulemakings/DF_26_PosLimits/index.htm. The CME petition was premised on the

    Commission's past reliance on open interest levels for setting

    position limits and the increase in open interest levels of the

    contracts listed in the petition.

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

    Single All

    Contract month months

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

    Corn (and Mini-Corn).............................. 20,500 33,000

    Soybeans (and Mini-Soybeans)...................... 10,000 15,000

    Wheat (and Mini-Wheat)............................ 9,000 12,000

    Soybean Oil....................................... 6,500 8,000

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

    If so adopted, should the limits on wheat at the Minneapolis Grain

    Exchange and the Kansas City Board of Trade also be increased to the

    level proposed for the wheat contract at the Chicago Board of Trade,

    consistent with the Commission's historical approach to setting limits

    for wheat contracts?

    C. Exemptions for Referenced Contracts

    Proposed Sec. 151.5 establishes exemptions from position limits

    for bona fide hedging transactions or positions as directed by the

    Dodd-Frank Act specifically for exempt and agricultural commodities.

    The referenced contracts subject to the proposed position limit

    framework would be subject to the bona fide provisions of proposed

    Sec. 151.5 and would no longer be subject to Sec. 1.3(z), which would

    be retained only for excluded commodities. Sec. 1.47 and Sec. 1.48

    would be removed by this notice of proposed rulemaking.

    Section 4a(c)(1) of the Act authorizes the Commission to define

    bona fide hedging transactions or positions ``consistent with the

    purposes of the Act.'' By its terms, the section places no restriction

    on the Commission's ability to define bona fide hedging for swaps.

    Congress also directed the Commission, in amended CEA section 4a(c)(2),

    to adopt a definition for bona fide hedging transactions or positions

    for purposes of setting position limits pursuant to section 4a(a)(2),

    which refers only to futures contracts or options.\41\ A definition of

    bona fide hedging that would exclude swaps would deny a commercial end-

    user the option of offsetting price risks with swaps (as opposed to

    futures) pursuant to a bona fide hedge exemption. Accordingly, pursuant

    to section 4a(c)(1) and (c)(2), the Commission is proposing a

    definition for bona fide hedging transactions and positions that would

    apply to all referenced contracts, including swaps, as opposed to

    referenced futures and option contracts only.

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

    \41\ The scope of contracts subject to position limits under

    section 4a(a)(2) includes physical commodity futures and options

    contracts traded on a DCM, other than excluded commodities.

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

    The statutory definition of a bona fide hedge in section 4a(c)(2)

    generally follows the existing definition in Commission Sec.

    1.3(z)(1), except: (1) The directive requires all bona fide hedging

    transactions and positions to represent a substitute for a physical

    market transaction; and (2) as discussed above, the directive provides

    an explicit exemption for a trader to reduce the risks of swap

    positions, provided the counterparty to the swap transaction would have

    qualified for a bona fide hedging transaction exemption or the risk

    reducing positions offset a swap that qualifies as a bona fide hedging

    transaction.

    The definition of bona fide hedging in Sec. 1.3(z) of the Act

    provides that a bona fide hedging transaction or position in a futures

    contract normally represents a substitute for a physical market

    [[Page 4761]]

    transaction; thus, the current definition is no longer consistent with

    amended CEA section 4a(c)(2). The plain text of the new statutory

    definition of bona fide hedging recognizes bona fide hedging for

    derivatives that are subject to this rulemaking only if such

    transactions or positions represent cash market transactions and offset

    cash market risks, as opposed to the acceptance of bona fide hedging

    transactions and positions as activity that normally, but not

    necessarily, represents a substitute for cash market transactions or

    positions.

    Proposed Sec. 151.5(a)(2) incorporates the current requirements of

    Commission Sec. 1.3(z)(2) for enumerated hedging transactions.

    Proposed Sec. 151.5(a)(2)(iv) also provides an exemption for agents

    contractually responsible for the merchandising of cash positions with

    a person who owns the commodity or holds the cash market commitment

    being offset. This agent provision is consistent with Commission Sec.

    1.3(z)(3) and Sec. 1.47.

    In this regard, should the Commission grant an exemption to an

    agent that is not responsible for the merchandising of the cash

    positions, but is linked to the production of the physical commodity,

    for example, if the agent is the provider of crop insurance?

    Proposed Sec. 151.5(b) establishes reporting requirements for a

    trader upon exceeding a position limit. The trader is required to

    submit information not later than 9:00 a.m. on the business day

    following the day the limits were exceeded. The reports would support

    hedgers' need for large referenced contract positions and would give

    the Commission the ability to verify the positions were a bona fide

    hedge.

    With respect to the frequency of filing such reports, should the

    Commission only require reports to be submitted either when a trader's

    position either first exceeds a limit or when a trader's hedging need

    increases, with a monthly summary while the trader's position remains

    in excess of the limit?

    Proposed Sec. 151.5(c) specifies application and approval

    requirements for traders seeking an anticipatory hedge exemption,

    incorporating the current requirements of Commission Sec. 1.48. As is

    the case under current Sec. 1.48, a trader's maximum sales and

    purchases shall not exceed the lesser of the approved exemption amount

    or the trader's current actual unsold anticipated production or current

    unfilled anticipated requirements. In addition, the proposed

    regulations require an anticipatory hedger to file a supplement to an

    application at least annually or whenever the anticipatory hedging

    needs increase beyond that in the most recent filing.

    Proposed Sec. 151.5(d) establishes additional reporting

    requirements for a trader that exceeds the position limits to reduce

    the risks of certain swap transactions, discussed above. Should the

    Commission only require such reports to be submitted when the trader's

    position either first exceeds a limit or the hedging need increases,

    with a monthly summary while the trader's position remains in excess of

    the limit?

    Proposed Sec. 151.5(e) specifies recordkeeping requirements for

    traders that acquire positions in reliance on bona fide hedge

    exemptions, as well as for swap counterparties for which a counterparty

    represents that the transaction would qualify as a bona fide hedging

    transaction. Swap dealers availing themselves of a hedge exemption

    would be required to maintain a list of such counterparties and make

    that list available to the Commission upon request. Proposed Sec.

    151.5(g) and (h) provide procedural documentation requirements for such

    swap participants.

    Proposed Sec. 151.5(f) requires a cross hedger to provide

    conversion information, as well as an explanation of the methodology

    used to determine such conversion information, between the commodity

    exposure and the referenced contracts used in hedging.

    Proposed Sec. 151.5(i) requires reports by bona fide hedgers to be

    filed for each business day, up to and including the day after the

    trader's position level is below the position limit that was exceeded.

    Proposed Sec. 151.5(j) provides that a swap counterparty with

    respect to bona fide hedging transactions may establish a position in

    excess of the position limits, offset that position, and then re-

    establish a position in excess of the position limits. For example,

    this provision permits a swap participant who has reduced the risk of

    swaps using a position in futures contracts (that would otherwise

    violate a position limit) to offset those futures contracts and

    subsequently, if necessary, re-establish a position in excess of class

    position limits in another venue in order to once again reduce the risk

    of the swap transactions.

    D. Position Visibility

    Based on its analysis of the proposed limits as applied to futures

    and option contract positions and cleared swaps for which the

    Commission has open interest data, the Commission does not anticipate

    that the number of traders with positions in referenced base and

    precious metals and referenced energy contracts, as further discussed

    below in the Cost-Benefit and Paperwork Reduction Act sections of this

    release, would constitute a significant segment of the affected

    markets, in contrast to the number of traders with positions in

    referenced agricultural contracts. Recognizing this, the Commission

    proposes to establish, in addition to the position limits discussed

    above, position visibility regulations for referenced contracts other

    than referenced agricultural contracts, pursuant to the Commission's

    authority to establish reporting requirements under section 4t of the

    Act, as added by the Dodd-Frank Act, and reporting requirements

    necessary for the establishment and enforcement of position limits

    under sections 4a and 8a(5) of the Act. The proposed visibility

    regulations would set position visibility reporting levels and

    establish reporting requirements for all traders exceeding those

    levels. The reporting regulations aim to make the physical and

    derivatives portfolios of the largest traders in referenced contracts

    visible to the Commission.

    The position visibility regime would improve the Commission's

    ability to monitor the positions of the largest traders in the markets

    for referenced base and precious metals and referenced energy contracts

    and the effects on the markets of those large positions and their

    associated physical commodity and derivatives portfolios. The data for

    referenced contracts and related portfolios that the Commission would

    receive pursuant to the position visibility regulations would allow the

    Commission to better analyze the nature of the largest traders'

    positions in referenced contracts.

    The Commission has set the visibility levels and its estimates on

    the number of traders they would capture based on data it currently

    receives on the futures and swaps markets. The Commission may revisit

    these levels as it begins to receive more data on the swaps markets.

    The Commission proposes to set the visibility reporting levels for

    referenced base and precious metals and referenced energy contracts

    where it anticipates approximately 20 unique owners over the course of

    a year would exceed such levels. Given their importance to the national

    economy, the Commission proposes to set visibility levels for the NYMEX

    Light Sweet Crude Oil (CL) and Henry Hub Natural Gas (NG) referenced

    contracts at a relatively lower level designed to capture approximately

    30 unique owners over the course of a year.

    Proposed Sec. 151.6 would require traders with positions above

    visibility

    [[Page 4762]]

    levels in referenced base and precious metals and energy commodities to

    submit additional information about cash market and derivatives

    activity, including data relating to substantially the same commodity,

    such as commodities that are different grades or formulations of the

    same basic commodity. Proposed Sec. 151.6(c) would require additional

    information, through a 402S filing, on a trader's uncleared swaps in

    substantially the same commodity. Proposed Sec. 151.6(d) would require

    the reportable trader to submit information about cash market positions

    in substantially the same commodity, as described in proposed Sec.

    151.5(b), through 404 and 404A filings.

    The Commission solicits comment on whether position visibility

    requirements should also be imposed on referenced agricultural

    contracts.

    E. Aggregation of Accounts

    Proposed Sec. 151.7 would establish account aggregation standards

    specifically for positions in referenced contracts. Under the proposed

    standards, the Federal position limits in referenced contracts would

    apply to all positions in accounts in which any trader, directly or

    indirectly, has an ownership or equity interest of 10 percent or

    greater or, by power of attorney or otherwise, controls trading. These

    standards for aggregation are consistent with the standards delineated

    in the Acceptable Practice to DCM Core Principle 5 in Appendix B to

    part 38 of the Commission's regulations. Proposed Sec. 151.7 would

    also treat positions held by two or more traders acting pursuant to an

    express or implied agreement or understanding the same as if the

    positions were held by, or the trading of the positions were done by, a

    single trader. Proposed Sec. 151.7 would require a trader to aggregate

    positions in multiple accounts or pools, including passively managed

    index funds, if those accounts or pools had identical trading

    strategies.

    Proposed Sec. 151.7(c) establishes a limited exemption for

    positions in pools in which a person that is a limited partner,

    shareholder or similar person has an ownership or equity interest of

    between 10 percent and 25 percent, if the person does not have control

    over or knowledge of the pool's trading. Proposed Sec. 151.7(e)

    establishes a limited exemption for the positions of futures commission

    merchants in certain discretionary accounts, if they maintain only

    minimum control over trading in the relevant account and if the trading

    decisions of that account are independent from trading decisions in the

    futures commission merchants' other accounts. Finally, proposed Sec.

    151.7(f) establishes a limited exemption for entities to disaggregate

    the positions of an independently controlled and managed trader that is

    not a financial entity, defined as an owned non-financial entity, in

    which it has an ownership or equity interest of 10 percent or greater,

    and it provides a non-exhaustive description of indicia that

    demonstrate independent control and management to the Commission. In

    all three cases, the exemption would only become effective upon the

    Commission's approval of an application described in proposed Sec.

    151.7(g).

    In the aggregation standards currently in force in part 150 of the

    Commission's regulations, eligible entities (a broad group that

    includes banks, insurance companies, mutual funds, commodity pool

    operators and commodity trading advisors) are permitted to disaggregate

    positions pursuant to a self-executing independent account controller

    framework. Part 150 also provides expansive disaggregation provisions

    for commodity pool operators, limited partners and other pool

    participants as well as for futures commission merchants.

    These disaggregation exceptions may be incompatible with the

    proposed Federal position limit framework and used to circumvent its

    requirements. Given that the proposed framework sets high position

    levels that are reflective of the largest positions held by market

    participants, permits for the netting of positions for like referenced

    contracts within each applicable position limit, and includes a

    conditional-spot-month limit for cash-settled contracts and exemptions

    for bona fide hedging (either directly or as a result of the look-

    through provision), allowing traders to establish a series of positions

    each near a proposed position limit, without aggregation, may not be

    appropriate. In addition, the self-executing nature of the exemptions

    creates an insufficient and inefficient verification regime and

    ultimately diminishes the Commission's ability to properly perform its

    market surveillance responsibilities.

    Thus, the proposed aggregation standards differ in several respects

    from the current standards in part 150. The proposed regulations would

    require aggregation for a passive pool participant with a 10 percent or

    greater ownership or equity interest (unless the pool operator had

    proper information barriers in place and the pool participant did not

    have control over the pool's trading decisions). By comparison, under

    current part 150, a passive pool participant would aggregate its

    positions only if it was also a principal or affiliate of the pool

    operator. The proposed regulations would require aggregation for any

    passive pool participant with a 25 percent or greater ownership or

    equity interest, with no possibility for disaggregation, whereas

    current part 150 only follows such an approach for pools with operators

    that are exempt from registration under Sec. 4.13. The proposed

    regulations would also require aggregation for positions in accounts or

    pools with identical trading strategies, which part 150 currently

    lacks, in order to prevent circumvention of the aggregation

    requirements by, for example, a trader seeking a large long-only

    position in a given commodity through specific positions in multiple

    pools.

    In addition, the proposed regulations do not retain the independent

    account controller exemption of part 150. The regulations proposed in

    January of 2010 to establish position limits for referenced energy

    contracts also did not include an independent account controller

    framework; they included only a very narrow exemption thereto for

    certain passive pool participants.\42\ Many commenters to the January

    2010 proposed regulations expressed opposition to such strict

    standards, arguing that they would force aggregation of positions in

    situations where meaningful control, management and information

    barriers demonstrated sufficient independence to warrant

    disaggregation. The current regulations address some of these concerns

    by establishing a limited exemption for owned non-financial entities.

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

    \42\ See 75 FR 4144, at 4146.

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

    The owned non-financial entity exemption would allow an entity to

    disaggregate (1) the positions of a non-financial entity in which it

    owns a 10 percent or greater ownership or equity interest from (2) its

    own directly held or controlled positions and the positions attributed

    to it (through the general 10 percent ownership standard or other

    aggregation requirements of the proposed regulations), if it can

    demonstrate that the owned non-financial entity is independently

    controlled and managed. This limited exemption aims to allow

    disaggregation primarily in the case of a conglomerate or holding

    company that merely has a passive ownership interest in one or more

    non-financial operating companies. In such cases, the operating

    companies may have complete trading and management independence and

    operate at such a distance from the holding company that it would not

    be

    [[Page 4763]]

    appropriate to aggregate positions. Two of the criteria proposed as

    indicia of independence are similar to those currently contained in

    part 150, namely the requirements that the entity have no knowledge of

    the owned non-financial entity's trading decisions (along with, in the

    proposed regulations, the reverse requirement that the owned non-

    financial entity have no knowledge of the entity's trading decisions)

    and that the owned non-financial entity have written policies and

    procedures to protect such knowledge. Two other proposed indicia not

    found in current part 150, requiring separate employees and risk

    management systems, would provide further evidence of the owned non-

    financial entity's independence. As mentioned above, the indicia

    described in proposed Sec. 151.7(f) are not meant to form an

    exhaustive list; under the proposed application process described in

    151.7(g), a departure from the self-executing exemption of part 150,

    the applying entity could describe for the Commission any other

    relevant circumstances that would warrant disaggregation.

    The Commission solicits comments on all aspects of its account

    aggregation regulations. In particular, the Commission solicits

    comments on the appropriateness of the definition of owned non-

    financial entities and the criteria used to determine the independence

    of such entities. The Commission also solicits comments on whether and

    under what circumstances the Commission should grant exemptions from

    account aggregation under its exemptive authority under section

    4a(a)(7) of the Act.

    F. Preexisting Positions and Exemptions

    Consistent with the good faith exemption in section 4a(b)(2) of the

    Act, the Commission will provide a limited exemption for positions in

    DCM contracts for future delivery or option contracts that are in

    excess of a position limit in proposed Sec. 151.2, provided that they

    were established in good faith prior to the effective date of a

    position limit set by rule, regulation or order. Such persons would not

    be allowed to enter into new, additional contracts in the same

    direction but could take up offsetting positions and thus reduce their

    total combined net position.\43\ Persons who established a net position

    below the speculative limit for a contract for future delivery prior to

    the enactment of a regulation would be permitted to acquire new

    positions. However, consistent with Commission practice, the Commission

    would calculate the combined position of a person based on any position

    established prior to enactment of a position limit rule, regulation or

    order plus any new position.

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

    \43\ The Commission understands that changes in option deltas

    could increase the net level of a person's pre-enactment position.

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

    In contrast to futures and option contracts, the proposed

    regulations would not apply position limits to Dodd-Frank Act pre-

    effective date swaps. The Commission is proposing this broad exemption

    since swaps generally may be appreciably longer lived than futures

    contracts thereby giving rise to concerns that position limits

    affecting pre-effective date swaps may unnecessarily disrupt position

    hedging through swap positions. The Commission would allow pre-

    effective date swaps to be netted with post-effective date swaps for

    the purpose of complying with position limits.

    The Commission has previously granted certain swap dealers hedge

    exemptions under current Sec. 1.47, without regard to the purposes or

    hedging needs of swap dealer counterparties. The Commission intends to

    permit such swap dealers to continue to manage the risk of a swap

    portfolio that exists at the time of implementation of the proposed

    regulations. No new swaps will be covered by the exemption.

    In this regard, the Commission seeks comment on what additional

    reporting requirements, if any, it should impose on swap dealers that

    were granted a hedge exemption.

    G. Foreign Boards of Trade

    Proposed Sec. 151.8 would provide that the aggregate position

    limits in proposed Sec. 151.4 apply to a trader's positions in

    referenced contracts executed on, or pursuant to the rules of, a

    foreign board of trade, subject to the following conditions. First, the

    FBOT contract, agreement, or transaction must settle against the price

    of a contract executed or cleared pursuant to the rules of a registered

    entity. Second, the FBOT must make such linked contracts available to

    its members or other participants located in the United States by

    direct access to its electronic trading and order matching system.

    H. Registered Entity Position Limits

    Proposed Sec. 151.11 requires registered entities \44\ to

    establish position limits for reference contracts that are at a level

    no higher than the position limits specified in proposed Sec. 151.4.

    Proposed Sec. 151.11(c) and (d)(1)(i) would require registered

    entities to follow the same account aggregation and bona fide exemption

    standards set forth by proposed Sec. 151.5 and Sec. 151.7 with

    respect to exempt and agricultural commodities.

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

    \44\ Relevant for these purposes, CEA section 1a(40), as amended

    by the Dodd-Frank Act, would define registered entity to include

    DCMs and SEFs.

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

    For excluded commodities,\45\ consistent with current DCM practice,

    registered entities would have the discretion to establish position

    accountability levels in lieu of position limits. Registered entities

    may impose position accountability rules in lieu of position limits

    only if either: The open interest in a contract is less than 5,000; or

    the contract involves a major currency; or involves an excluded

    commodity that has the following three characteristics: (1) An average

    daily open interest of 50,000 or more contracts, (2) an average daily

    trading volume of 100,000 or more contracts, and (3) a highly liquid

    cash market.

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

    \45\ See section 1a(19) of the Act.

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

    With respect to excluded commodities, consistent with the current

    DCM practice, registered entities may provide for exemptions from their

    position limits for ``bona fide hedging.'' The term ``bona fide

    hedging,'' as used with respect to excluded commodities, shall be

    defined in accordance with amended CFTC Sec. 1.3(z).\46\ Additionally,

    consistent with the current DCM practice, registered entities may

    continue to provide exemptions for ``risk-reducing'' and ``risk-

    management'' transactions or positions consistent with existing

    Commission guidelines.\47\ Finally, though the Commission is removing

    the procedure to apply to the Commission for bona fide hedge exemptions

    for non-enumerated transactions or positions under Sec. 1.3(z)(3), the

    Commission will continue to recognize prior Commission determinations

    under that section, and registered entities may recognize non-

    enumerated hedge transactions subject to Commission review.

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

    \46\ See Section 151.11(d)(1)(ii) of these proposed regulations.

    As explained in section C of this release, the definition of bona

    fide hedge transaction or position contained in section 4a(c)(2) of

    the Act does not, by its terms, apply to excluded commodities.

    \47\ See Clarification of Certain Aspects of Hedging Definition,

    52 FR 27195, Jul. 20, 1987; and Risk Management Exemptions From

    Speculative Position Limits Approved under Commission Regulation

    1.61, 52 FR 34633, Sept. 14, 1987.

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

    I. Delegation

    Proposed Sec. 151.12 delegates certain of the Commission's

    proposed part 151 authority to the Director of the Division of Market

    Oversight and to other employee or employees as designated by the

    Director. The delegated authority

    [[Page 4764]]

    extends to: (1) Determining open interest levels for the purpose of

    setting non-spot-month position limits; (2) granting an exemption

    relating to bona fide hedging transactions; and (3) providing

    instructions or determining the format, coding structure, and

    electronic data transmission procedures for submitting data records and

    any other information required under proposed part 151. The purpose of

    this delegation provision is to facilitate the ability of the

    Commission to respond to changing market and technological conditions

    and thus ensure timely and accurate data reporting. In this regard, the

    Commission specifically requests comments on whether determinations of

    open interest or deliverable supply should be adopted through

    Commission orders.

    III. Related Matters

    A. Cost-Benefit Analysis

    Section 15(a) of the Act requires that the Commission, before

    promulgating a regulation under the Act or issuing an order, consider

    the costs and benefits of its action. By its terms, CEA section 15(a)

    does not require the Commission to quantify the costs and benefits of a

    new regulation or determine whether the benefits of the regulation

    outweigh its costs. Rather, CEA section 15(a) simply requires the

    Commission to ``consider the costs and benefits'' of its action.

    CEA section 15(a) specifies that costs and benefits shall be

    evaluated in light of the following considerations: (1) Protection of

    market participants and the public; (2) efficiency, competitiveness,

    and financial integrity of futures markets; (3) price discovery; (4)

    sound risk management practices; and (5) other public interest

    considerations. Accordingly, the Commission could, in its discretion,

    give greater weight to any of the five considerations and could, in its

    discretion, determine that, notwithstanding its costs, a particular

    regulation was necessary or appropriate to protect the public interest

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

    purposes of the Act.

    The proposed position limits and their concomitant limitation on

    trading activity could impose certain general but significant costs.

    Overly restrictive position limits could cause unintended consequences

    by decreasing speculative activity and therefore liquidity in the

    markets for the referenced contracts, impairing the price discovery

    process in these markets, and encouraging the migration of speculative

    activity and perhaps price discovery to markets outside of the

    Commission's jurisdiction. The outside spot-month position limits that

    would likely result from the application of the 10, 2.5 percent open

    interest formula, as proposed, are intended as high levels that

    speculators are likely to acquire in order to avoid disrupting or

    interfering with beneficial speculative trading.

    Congress has charged the Commission with establishing position

    limits on traders in certain physical commodity derivatives. In CEA

    section 4a(a)(3), Congress directed the Commission to establish such

    position limits in order to achieve, to the maximum extent practicable,

    in the Commission's discretion, the following objectives: To diminish,

    eliminate, or prevent excessive speculation; to deter and prevent

    market manipulation; while ensuring sufficient market liquidity for

    bona fide hedgers and protecting the price discovery function of

    commodity derivatives. Insofar as the provisions of the proposed part

    151 effectuate these goals, then the market and the public as a whole

    would benefit.

    In section 4a of the Act, Congress determined that excessive

    speculation in ``any commodity under contracts of sale of such

    commodity for future delivery * * * or swaps that perform a significant

    price discovery function with respect to regulated entities causing

    sudden or unreasonable fluctuations or unwarranted changes in the price

    of such commodity, is an undue and unnecessary burden on interstate

    commerce.'' In section 4a(a)(3) of the Act, Congress charged the

    Commission with the task of setting position limits designed to

    diminish, eliminate, or prevent ``excessive speculation.'' Accordingly,

    the speculative position limit framework established by the Commission

    would be expected to benefit the public and the markets regulated by

    the Commission by diminishing, eliminating, or preventing the undue

    burdens on interstate commerce that result from excessive speculation

    in markets regulated by the Commission.

    In addition, the proposed visibility levels and associated

    reporting requirements of proposed Sec. 151.6 would enable the

    Commission to better understand generally the portfolio compositions,

    including bona fide hedging needs, of the largest position holders of

    referenced contracts. This data would enable the Commission to

    determine whether to readjust the speculative position limits to

    continue to ensure the statutory objectives are met. Visibility reports

    would allow the Commission to have a better sense of the relative

    distribution of speculative versus non-speculative positions and

    activity, as well as the nature and effect of the largest speculative

    traders in referenced contracts.

    Section 4a(a)(3) of the Act also charges the Commission with

    setting position limits designed to ``deter and prevent market

    manipulation.'' The limitation on a trader's ability to take a very

    large position, not justified by a bona fide hedging need, may reduce a

    trader's ability to manipulate a market. By reducing a trader's ability

    to manipulate a market, a position limit regime would prevent

    manipulation and therefore avoid the resulting price distortions,

    economic harm, and misallocation of resources. In addition, the

    visibility levels and associated reporting obligations, as proposed in

    Sec. 151.6, would provide the Commission greater visibility into the

    portfolios of large speculative traders, thereby potentially

    facilitating early regulatory intervention when potential manipulative

    conduct or price distortions are detected.

    In addition to reducing the undue burdens arising from excessive

    speculation and manipulation, by reducing the ability of a market

    participant to gain very large speculative exposure in referenced

    contracts, proposed part 151 would encourage better risk management,

    reduce the likelihood of default, and may thereby reduce systemic risk.

    Although futures markets employ centralized clearing arrangements that

    reduce systemic risk, a very large speculative position taken by a

    levered participant across futures markets, other trading facilities,

    and in over-the-counter derivatives can result in a default risk not

    properly accounted for by any one trading venue or counterparty. The

    proposed regulations may therefore promote the financial integrity of

    the markets and protect the public by reducing systemic risk insofar as

    the provisions of the proposed part 151 would reduce the likelihood of

    such levered entities to generate systemic risk by either limiting

    their ability to amass a very large speculative position or by making

    such entities more visible to the Commission pursuant to proposed Sec.

    151.6.

    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 proposed part 151.

    [[Page 4765]]

    B. The Regulatory Flexibility Act

    The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.,

    requires that agencies consider the impact of their regulations on

    small businesses. The requirements related to the proposed amendments

    fall mainly on registered entities, exchanges, futures commission

    merchants, swap dealers, clearing members, foreign brokers, and large

    traders. The Commission has previously determined that exchanges,

    futures commission merchants and large traders are not ``small

    entities'' for the purposes of the RFA.\48\ Similarly, swap dealers,

    clearing members, foreign brokers and traders would be subject to the

    proposed regulations only if carrying or holding large positions.

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

    certifies, pursuant to 5 U.S.C 605(b), that the actions proposed to be

    taken herein would not have a significant economic impact on a

    substantial number of small entities.

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

    \48\ 44 U.S.C. 601 et seq.

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

    C. Paperwork Reduction Act

    1. Overview

    The Paperwork Reduction Act (``PRA'') \49\ imposes certain

    requirements on Federal agencies in connection with their conducting or

    sponsoring any collection of information as defined by the PRA. Certain

    provisions of the proposed regulations would result in new collection

    of information requirements within the meaning of the PRA. An agency

    may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to respond to,

    a collection of information unless it displays a currently valid

    control number. The Office of Management and Budget (``OMB'') has not

    yet assigned a control number to the new collections associated with

    these proposed regulations. Therefore, the Commission is submitting

    this proposal to OMB for review in accordance with 44 U.S.C. 3507(d)

    and 5 CFR 1320.11. The title for this proposed collection of

    information is ``Part 151--Position Limit Framework for Referenced

    Contracts'' (OMB control number 3038-NEW).

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

    \49\ 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.

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

    If adopted, responses to this collection of information would be

    mandatory. The Commission will protect proprietary information

    according to the Freedom of Information Act and 17 CFR part 145, headed

    ``Commission Records and Information.'' In addition, the Commission

    emphasizes that 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.'' \50\ The Commission also is required

    to protect certain information contained in a government system of

    records pursuant to the Privacy Act of 1974.\51\

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

    \50\ 7 U.S.C. 12(a)(1).

    \51\ 5 U.S.C. 552a.

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

    Under the proposed regulations, market participants with positions

    in referenced contracts, as defined in proposed Sec. 151.2, would be

    subject to the position limit framework established by proposed part

    151. Proposed part 151 prescribes reporting requirements for traders

    claiming compliance with the conditional spot-month position limit

    (proposed Sec. 151.4(a)(2)), reporting requirements for DCMs that list

    a referenced contract (proposed Sec. 151.4(c)), traders claiming a

    bona fide hedging exemption (proposed Sec. 151.5(b) and (c)), traders

    claiming a bona fide hedge that does not involve the same quantity or

    commodity as the quantity or commodity associated with positions in

    referenced contracts that are used to hedge risk (proposed Sec.

    151.5(f)), traders claiming a bona fide swap counterparty exemption

    (proposed Sec. 151.5(d)), traders with positions above a visibility

    level (proposed Sec. 151.6(a)), and entities seeking an exemption to

    mandatory account aggregation regulations (proposed Sec. 151.7(g)). In

    addition to these reporting requirements, proposed Sec. 151.5(e) and

    (g) specify recordkeeping requirements for traders who receive bona

    fide hedge exemptions, as well as for swap counterparties for which the

    transaction would qualify as a bona fide hedging transaction.

    2. Information Provided and Recordkeeping Duties

    Proposed Sec. 151.4(a)(2) provides for a special conditional spot-

    month limit for traders under certain conditions, including the

    submission of a certification that the trader meets the required

    conditions. These certifications would be filed within a day after the

    trader exceeds a conditional spot-month limit.

    The Commission anticipates that approximately one-hundred traders a

    year will submit conditional spot-month limit certifications. The

    Commission estimates that these one-hundred entities would incur a

    total burden of 2,400 annual labor hours resulting in a total of

    $189,000 in annual labor costs \52\ and $1 million in annualized

    capital and start-up costs \53\ and annual total operating and

    maintenance costs.

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

    \52\ The Commission staff's estimates concerning the wage rates

    are based on salary information for the securities industry compiled

    by the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association

    (``SIFMA''). The $78.61 per hour is derived from figures from a

    weighted average of salaries and bonuses across different

    professions from the SIFMA Report on Management & Professional

    Earnings in the Securities Industry 2010, modified to account for an

    1800-hour work-year and multiplied by 1.3 to account for overhead

    and other benefits. The wage rate is a weighted national average of

    salary and bonuses for professionals with the following titles (and

    their relative weight): ``programmer (senior)'' (30% weight);

    ``programmer'' (30%); ``compliance advisor (intermediate);'' (20%),

    ``systems analyst;'' (10%); and ``assistant/associate general

    counsel'' (10%).

    \53\ The capital/start-up cost component of ``annualized

    capital/start-up, operating, and maintenance costs'' is based on an

    initial capital/start-up cost that is straight-line depreciated over

    five years.

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

    Proposed Sec. 151.4(c) requires that DCMs submit an estimate of

    deliverable supply by the 31st of December of each calendar year for

    each referenced contract that is subject to a spot-month position limit

    and listed or executed pursuant to the rules of the DCM. The Commission

    estimates that this proposed reporting regulation will affect

    approximately six entities annually resulting in a total marginal

    burden, across all of these entities, of 6,000 annual labor hours and

    $55,000 in annualized capital and start-up costs and annual total

    operating and maintenance costs.

    Proposed Sec. 151.5 sets forth the application procedure for bona

    fide hedgers and counterparties to bona fide hedging swap transactions

    that seek an exemption from the proposed Commission-set federal

    position limits for referenced contracts. If a bona fide hedger seeks

    to claim an exemption from position limits because of cash market

    activities, then the hedger would submit a 404 filing pursuant to

    proposed Sec. 151.5(b). The 404 filing would be submitted when the

    bona fide hedger claims an exemption or when its hedging needs

    increase. Parties to bona fide hedging swap transactions would be

    required to submit a 404S filing to qualify for a hedging exemption,

    which would also be submitted when the bona fide hedger claims an

    exemption or when its hedging needs increase. If a bona fide hedger

    seeks an exemption for anticipated commercial production or

    anticipatory commercial requirements, then the hedger would submit a

    404A filing pursuant to proposed Sec. 151.5(c). The 404A filing would

    be submitted at least ten days in advance of the date that transactions

    and positions would be established that would exceed a position limit.

    Further, on an annual basis or whenever a trader's anticipated hedge

    requirements exceed the amount of the most recent 404A filing,

    [[Page 4766]]

    whichever is earlier, the trader would be required to file a

    supplemental report updating the information provided in the most

    recent 404A filing. Traders hedging commercial activity (or hedging

    swaps that in turn hedge commercial activity) that does not involve the

    same quantity or commodity as the quantity or commodity associated with

    positions in referenced contracts that are used to hedge shall submit

    the conversion methodology and information along with the appropriate

    404, 404A, or 404S filing. The Commission anticipates that the

    compliance cost associated with all of these filings will be

    substantial, particularly in the case of the 404S filings, which may

    require the collection and storage of information on counterparties

    that firms have hitherto not conducted.

    The Commission estimates that these bona fide hedging-related

    reporting requirements would affect approximately two hundred entities

    annually and result in a total burden of approximately $37.6 million

    across all of these entities, of 168,000 annual labor hours resulting

    in a total of $13.2 million in annual labor costs and $25.4 million in

    annualized capital and start-up costs and annual total operating and

    maintenance costs. 404 filings proposed reporting regulations would

    affect approximately ninety entities annually resulting in a total

    burden, across all of these entities, of 108,000 total annual labor

    hours and $11.7 million in annualized capital and start-up costs and

    annual total operating and maintenance costs. 404A filings proposed

    reporting regulations would affect approximately sixty entities

    annually resulting in a total burden, across all of these entities, of

    6,000 total annual labor hours and $4.2 million in annualized capital

    and start-up costs and annual total operating and maintenance costs.

    404S filings proposed reporting regulations would affect approximately

    forty-five entities annually resulting in a total burden, across all of

    these entities, of 54,000 total annual labor hours and $9.5 million in

    annualized capital and start-up costs and annual total operating and

    maintenance costs.

    Proposed Sec. 151.5(e) specifies recordkeeping requirements for

    traders who claim bona fide hedge exemptions. These recordkeeping

    requirements include ``complete books and records concerning all of

    their related cash, futures, and swap positions and transactions and

    make such books and records, along with a list of swap

    counterparties.'' Proposed Sec. 151.5(g) and (h) provide procedural

    documentation requirements for those availing themselves of a bona fide

    hedging transaction exemption. These firms would be required to

    document a representation and confirmation by at least one party that

    the swap counterparty is relying on a bona fide hedge exemption, along

    with a confirmation of receipt by the other party to the swap.

    Paragraph (h) of Section 151.5 also requires that the written

    representation and confirmation be retained by the parties and

    available to the Commission upon request. The marginal impact of this

    requirement is limited because of its overlap with existing

    recordkeeping requirements under Sec. 15.03. The Commission estimates

    that bona fide hedging-related proposed recordkeeping regulations would

    affect approximately one-hundred and sixty entities resulting in a

    total burden, across all of these entities, of 40,000 total annual

    labor hours and $10.4 million in annualized capital and start-up costs

    and annual total operating and maintenance costs.

    Proposed Sec. 151.6 would require those traders with positions

    exceeding visibility levels in referenced base and precious metals and

    energy commodities to submit additional information about cash market

    and derivatives activity in substantially the same commodity. Proposed

    Sec. 151.6(b) would require the submission of a 401 filing which would

    provide basic position information on the position exceeding the

    visibility level. Proposed Sec. 151.6(c) would require additional

    information, through a 402S filing, on a trader's uncleared swaps in

    substantially the same commodity. Proposed Sec. 151.6(d) would require

    the reportable trader to submit information about cash market positions

    or anticipated commercial requirements or production in substantially

    the same commodity, as described in proposed Sec. 151.5(b) and (c),

    through a 404 or 404A filing, respectively. All of the proposed 151.6

    reports would be submitted on a monthly basis for as long as a trader

    exceeds a visibility level.

    The Commission estimates that visibility level-related proposed

    reporting regulations will affect approximately one-hundred and forty

    entities annually resulting in a total burden, across all of these

    entities, of 30,400 annual labor hours resulting in a total of $2.4

    million in annual labor costs and $27.3 million in annualized capital

    and start-up costs and annual total operating and maintenance costs.

    Proposed 401 filing reporting regulations would affect approximately

    one-hundred and forty entities annually resulting in a total burden,

    across all of these entities, of 168,000 total annual labor hours and

    $15.4 million in annualized capital and start-up costs and annual total

    operating and maintenance costs. Proposed 402S filing reporting

    regulations would affect approximately seventy entities annually

    resulting in a total burden, across all of these entities, of 5,600

    total annual labor hours and $4.9 million in annualized capital and

    start-up costs and annual total operating and maintenance costs.

    Proposed visibility level-related 404 filing reporting regulations \54\

    would affect approximately sixty entities annually resulting in a total

    burden, across all of these entities, of 4,800 total annual labor hours

    and $4.2 million in annualized capital and start-up costs and annual

    total operating and maintenance costs. Proposed visibility level-

    related 404A filing reporting regulations would affect approximately

    forty entities annually resulting in a total burden, across all of

    these entities, of 3,200 total annual labor hours and $2.8 million in

    annualized capital and start-up costs and annual total operating and

    maintenance costs.

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

    \54\ For the visibility level-related 404 and 404A filing

    requirements, the estimated burden is based on reporting duties not

    already accounted for in the burden estimate for those submitting

    404 or 404A filings pursuant to proposed regulation 151.5. For many

    of these firms, the experience and infrastructure developed

    submitting or preparing to submit a 404 or 404A filing under

    proposed regulation 151.5 would reduce the marginal burden imposed

    by having to submit filings under proposed regulation 151.6.

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

    Proposed Sec. 151.7 concerns the aggregation of trader accounts.

    Proposed Sec. 151.7(g) would provide for a disaggregation exemption

    for: (1) A limited partner, shareholder or similar person with an

    ownership or equity interest of between 10 percent and 25 percent in a

    pool, if the trader does not have control over or knowledge of a pool's

    trading; (2) futures commission merchants that meet certain independent

    trading requirements; and (3) an independently controlled and managed

    trader, that is not a financial entity, in which another entity has an

    ownership or equity interest of 10 percent or greater. In all three

    cases, the exemption would become effective upon the Commission's

    approval of an application described in proposed Sec. 151.7(g). These

    applications for exemptions would be submitted at the time a trader

    claims an exemption and within thirty calendar days of January 1 of

    each year following the initial application for exemption. The

    Commission estimates that these proposed reporting regulations will

    affect approximately sixty entities resulting in a total burden, across

    all of these entities, of 300,000 annual labor

    [[Page 4767]]

    hours and $9.9 million in annualized capital and start-up costs and

    annual total operating and maintenance costs.

    3. Comments on Information Collection

    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: (1) 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; (2) evaluate the accuracy of the Commission's

    estimate of the burden of the proposed collections of information; (3)

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

    clarity of the information to be collected; and (4) 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 OIRA-submissions@omb.eop.gov. Please provide the Commission with a copy of

    comments submitted so that all comments can be summarized and addressed

    in the final regulation preamble. Refer to the Addresses section of

    this notice for comment submission instructions to the Commission. A

    copy of the supporting statements for the collection of information

    discussed above may be obtained by visiting RegInfo.gov. OMB is

    required to make a decision 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 considered if received

    by OMB (and the Commission) within 30 days after the publication of

    this notice of proposed rulemaking.

    List of Subjects

    17 CFR Part 1

    Brokers, Commodity futures, Consumer protection, Reporting and

    recordkeeping requirements.

    17 CFR Part 150

    Commodity futures, Cotton, Grains.

    17 CFR Part 151

    Position limits, Bona fide hedging, Referenced contracts.

    In consideration of the foregoing, pursuant to the authority

    contained in the Commodity Exchange Act, the Commission hereby proposes

    to amend chapter I of title 17 of the Code of Federal Regulations as

    follows:

    PART 1--GENERAL REGULATIONS UNDER THE COMMODITY EXCHANGE ACT

    1. The authority citation for part 1 is revised to read as follows:

    Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1a, 2, 5, 6, 6a, 6b, 6c, 6d, 6e, 6f, 6g, 6h,

    6i, 6j, 6k, 6l, 6m, 6n, 6o, 6p, 7, 7a, 7b, 8, 9, 12, 12a, 12c, 13a,

    13a-1, 16, 16a, 19, 21, 23, and 24, as amended by Title VII of the

    Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, Pub. L.

    111-203, 124 Stat. 1376 (2010).

    2. Amend Sec. 1.3(z) as follows:

    a. Amend the heading in paragraph (z) by adding ``for excluded

    commodities'' after the phrase ``positions.''

    b. Amend paragraph (z)(1) introductory text by removing the phrase

    ``transactions or positions in a contract for future delivery on any

    contract market, or in a commodity option'' after the phrase ``Bona

    fide hedging transactions or positions shall mean,'' and by adding, in

    its place, the phrase ``any agreement, contract or transaction in an

    excluded commodity on a registered entity, as that term is defined in

    Section 1a(40) of the Act.''

    c. Amend paragraph (z)(1) concluding text by removing ``and

    Sec. Sec. 1.47 and 1.48 of the regulations.''

    d. Amend paragraph (z)(2)(i) by removing the phrase ``commodity for

    future delivery on a contract market'' after ``Sales of any'' and by

    adding, in its place, the phrase ``agreement, contract or transaction

    in a excluded commodity on a registered entity.''

    e. Amend paragraph (z)(2)(i)(B) by removing the phrase ``future

    during the five last trading days of that future'' and by adding, in

    its place, the phrase ``agreement, contract or transaction during the

    five last trading days.''

    f. Amend paragraph (z)(2)(ii) by removing the phrase ``commodity

    for future delivery on a contract market'' after ``Purchases of any''

    and by adding, in its place, the phrase ``agreement, contract or

    transaction in a excluded commodity on a registered entity.''

    g. Amend paragraph (z)(2)(ii)(C) by removing the phrase ``one

    future'' and by adding, in its place, the phrase ``agreement, contract

    or transaction.''

    h. Amend paragraph (z)(2)(iii) by removing the phrase ``for future

    delivery on a contract market'' after ``Offsetting sales and

    purchases'' and by adding, in its place, the phrase ``in any agreement,

    contract or transaction in a excluded commodity on a registered

    entity.''

    i. Amend paragraph (z)(2)(iii) by removing the phrase ``future

    during the five last trading days of that future'' and by adding, in

    its place, the phrase ``agreement, contract or transaction during the

    five last trading days.''

    j. Redesignate paragraph (z)(2)(iv) as paragraph (z)(2)(v).

    k. Amend newly redesignated paragraph (z)(2)(v) by removing the

    phrase ``for future delivery described in paragraphs (z)(2)(i),

    (z)(2)(ii) and (z)(2)(iii)'' and by adding, in its place, the phrase

    ``described in paragraphs (z)(2)(i), (z)(2)(ii), (z)(2)(iii) and

    (z)(2)(iv).''

    l. Amend newly redesignated paragraph (z)(2)(v) by removing the

    phrase ``for future delivery'' after the phrase ``fluctuations in value

    of the position'' and by adding, in its place, the phrase ``in any

    agreement, contract or transaction.''

    m. Amend newly redesignated paragraph (z)(2)(v) by removing the

    phrase ``positions in any one future shall not be maintained during the

    five last trading days of that future'' and by adding, in its place,

    the phrase ``positions in any agreement, contract or transaction shall

    not be maintained during the five last trading days.''

    n. Add new paragraph (z)(2)(iv) and revise paragraph (z)(3) to read

    as follows:

    Sec. 1.3 Definitions.

    * * * * *

    (z) * * *

    (2) * * *

    (iv) Purchases or sales by an agent who does not own or has not

    contracted to sell or purchase the offsetting cash commodity at a fixed

    price, provided that the person is responsible for the merchandising of

    the cash positions which is being offset and the agent has a

    contractual arrangement with the person who owns the commodity or holds

    the cash market commitment being offset.

    * * * * *

    (z)(3) Non-Enumerated cases. A registered entity may recognize,

    consistent with the purposes of this section, transactions and

    positions other than those enumerated in paragraph (2) of this section

    as bona fide hedging. Prior to recognizing such non-enumerated

    transactions and positions, the registered entity shall submit such

    rules for Commission review under section 5c of the Act and Sec. 40 of

    this chapter.

    * * * * *

    Sec. 1.47 [Removed and Reserved]

    3. Remove and reserve Sec. 1.47.

    Sec. 1.48 [Removed and Reserved]

    4. Remove and reserve Sec. 1.48.

    [[Page 4768]]

    PART 150--[REMOVED AND RESERVED]

    5. Remove and reserve part 150.

    6. Add part 151 to read as follows:

    PART 151--LIMITS ON POSITIONS

    Sec.

    151.1 Definitions.

    151.2 Core referenced futures contracts.

    151.3 Referenced contract spot months.

    151.4 Position limits for referenced contracts.

    151.5 Exemptions for referenced contracts.

    151.6 Position visibility.

    151.7 Aggregation of positions.

    151.8 Foreign boards of trade.

    151.9 Preexisting positions.

    151.10 Form and manner of reporting and submitting information or

    filings.

    151.11 Registered entity position limits.

    151.12 Delegation of authority to the Director of the Division of

    Market Oversight.

    Appendix A to Part 151

    Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1a, 2, 5, 6, 6a, 6c, 6f, 6g, 6t, 12a, 19, as

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

    Consumer Protection Act, Pub. L. 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376 (2010).

    Sec. 151.1 Definitions.

    As used in this part--

    Basis contract means an agreement, contract or transaction that is

    cash settled based on the difference in price of the same commodity (or

    substantially the same commodity) at different delivery points;

    Calendar spread contract means a cash settled agreement, contract

    or transaction that represents the difference between the settlement

    price in one or a series of contract months of an agreement, contract

    or transaction and another contract month's or another series of

    contract months' settlement price for the same agreement, contract or

    transaction.

    Contracts of the same class mean referenced contracts based on the

    same commodity that are:

    (1) Futures or option contracts executed pursuant to the rules of a

    designated contract market; or

    (2) Cleared or uncleared swaps.

    Commodity index contract means an agreement, contract or

    transaction that is not a basis or spread contract, based on an index

    comprised of prices of commodities that are not the same nor

    substantially the same, provided that, a commodity index contract that

    incorporates the price of a commodity underlying a referenced

    contract's commodity which is used to circumvent speculative position

    limits shall be considered to be a referenced contract for the purpose

    of applying the position limits of Sec. 151.4.

    Core referenced futures contract means a futures contract that is

    listed in Sec. 151.2.

    Entity means a ``person'' as defined in section 1a of the Act.

    Excluded commodity means an ``excluded commodity'' as defined in

    section 1a of the Act.

    Financial entity means any entity that, regardless of any asset or

    capital threshold or any other condition in section 1a(18) of the Act,

    is an entity identified in section 1a(18)(A)(i) through (iv), (vi),

    (viii) through (x) and (B)(ii) of the Act.

    Futures contract class means referenced contracts that are based on

    the same commodity and are futures and option contracts executed

    pursuant to the rules of a designated contract market.

    Intercommodity spread contract means a cash-settled agreement,

    contract or transaction that represents the difference between the

    settlement price of a referenced contract and the settlement price of

    another contract, agreement, or transaction that is based on a

    different commodity.

    Owned non-financial entity means any entity that is not a financial

    entity and in which another entity directly or indirectly has a 10

    percent or greater ownership or equity interest.

    Referenced contract means, on a futures equivalent basis with

    respect to a particular core referenced futures contract, a futures

    listed in Sec. 151.2, or a referenced paired futures contract, option

    contract, swap or swaption, other than a basis contract or contract on

    a commodity index.

    Referenced paired futures contract, option contract, swap or

    swaption means, respectively, an open futures contract, option

    contract, swap or swaption that is:

    (1) Directly or indirectly linked, including being partially or

    fully settled on, or priced at a differential to, the price of any core

    referenced futures contract; or

    (2) Directly or indirectly linked, including being partially or

    fully settled on, or priced at a differential to, the price of the same

    commodity for delivery at the same location, or at locations with

    substantially the same supply and demand fundamentals, as that of any

    core referenced futures contract.

    Spot month means, for referenced contracts based on a commodity

    identified in Sec. 151.3, the spot month corresponding to the spot

    month of the core futures contract that overlies the same commodity.

    Spot-month, single-month, and all-months-combined position limits

    mean, for referenced contracts based on a commodity identified in Sec.

    151.3, the position limit corresponding to the position limit of the

    core futures contract that overlies the same commodity.

    Spread contract means either a calendar spread contract or an

    intercommodity spread contract.

    Swap means ``swap'' as defined in section 1a of the Act and as

    further defined by the Commission.

    Swap contract class means referenced contracts that are based on

    the same commodity and are swaps.

    Swaption means an option to enter into a swap or a physical

    commodity option.

    Swap dealer means ``swap dealer'' as that term is defined in

    section 1a of the Act and as further defined by the Commission.

    Trader means a person that, for its own account or for an account

    that it controls, makes transactions in referenced contracts or has

    such transactions made.

    Sec. 151.2 Core referenced futures contracts.

    (a) Agricultural commodities. The core referenced futures contracts

    include:

    (1) ICE Futures U.S. Cocoa (CC) contract based on a trading unit of

    10 metric tons delivered at licensed warehouses in the Port of New York

    District, Delaware River Port District, Port of Hampton Roads, Port of

    Albany, or Port of Baltimore;

    (2) ICE Futures U.S. Coffee C (KC) contract based on a trading unit

    of 37,500 pounds delivered at the Port of New York District, the Port

    of New Orleans, the Port of Houston, the Port of Bremen/Hamburg, the

    Port of Antwerp, the Port of Miami, or the Port of Barcelona;

    (3) Chicago Board of Trade Corn (C) contract based on a trading

    unit of 5,000 bushels delivered at Chicago and Burns Harbor, Indiana

    Switching District, Lockport-Seneca Shipping District, Ottawa-

    Chillicothe Shipping District, or Peoria-Pekin Shipping District;

    (4) ICE Futures U.S. Cotton No. 2 (CT) contract based on a trading

    unit of 50,000 pounds net weight delivered at Galveston, Texas;

    Houston, Texas; New Orleans, Louisiana; Memphis, Tennessee, or

    Greenville/Spartanburg, South Carolina;

    (5) Chicago Mercantile Exchange Feeder Cattle (FC) contract based

    on a trading unit of 50,000 pounds priced based on the CME Feeder

    Cattle Index or any other contract based on a sample of feeder cattle

    sales transactions in Colorado, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Montana,

    Nebraska, New Mexico, North

    [[Page 4769]]

    Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Texas, and Wyoming;

    (6) ICE Futures U.S. FCOJ-A (OJ) contract based on a trading unit

    of 15,000 pounds delivered at licensed warehouses in Florida, New

    Jersey, and Delaware;

    (7) Chicago Mercantile Exchange Lean Hog (LH) contract based on a

    trading unit of 40,000 pounds priced based on the CME Lean Hog Index;

    (8) Chicago Mercantile Exchange Live Cattle (LC) contract based on

    a trading unit of 40,000 pounds delivered at livestock yards in Wray,

    Colorado, Worthing, South Dakota; Syracuse, Kansas; Tulia, Texas;

    Columbus, Nebraska; Dodge City, Kansas; Amarillo, Texas; Norfolk,

    Nebraska; North Platte, Nebraska; Ogallala, Nebraska; Pratt, Kansas;

    Texhoma, Oklahoma; or Clovis, New Mexico;

    (9) Chicago Mercantile Exchange Class III Milk (DA) contract based

    on a trading unit of 200,000 pounds priced based on the USDA Class III

    price for milk;

    (10) Chicago Board of Trade Oats (O) contract based on a trading

    unit of 5,000 bushels delivered at Chicago Switching District, the

    Burns Harbor, Indiana Switching District, Minneapolis, St. Paul,

    Minnesota Switching Districts, Duluth Minnesota, or Superior,

    Wisconsin;

    (11) Chicago Board of Trade Rough Rice (RR) contract based on a

    trading unit of 200,000 pounds delivered at warehouses in the Arkansas

    counties of Craighead, Jackson, Poinsett, Woodruff, Cross, St. Francis,

    Lonoke, Prairie, Monroe, Jefferson, Arkansas, or DeSha;

    (12) Chicago Board of Trade Soybeans (S) contract based on a

    trading unit of 5,000 bushels delivered at Chicago and Burns Harbor,

    Indiana Switching District, Lockport-Seneca Shipping District, Ottawa-

    Chillicothe Shipping District, Peoria-Pekin Shipping District, Havana-

    Grafton Shipping District, or St. Louis-East St. Louis and Alton

    Switching Districts;

    (13) Chicago Board of Trade Soybean Meal (SM) contract based on a

    trading unit of 100 short tons shipped from plants located in the

    Central Territory, Northeast Territory, Mid South Territory, Missouri

    Territory, Eastern Iowa Territory, or Northern Territory;

    (14) Chicago Board of Trade Soybean Oil (BO) contract based on a

    trading unit of 60,000 pounds delivered at warehouses located in the

    Illinois Territory, Eastern Territory, Eastern Iowa Territory,

    Southwest Territory, Western Territory or Northern Territory;

    (15) ICE Futures U.S. Sugar No. 11 (SB) contract based on a trading

    unit of 112,000 pounds delivered at a port in the country of origin or

    in the case of landlocked countries, at a berth or anchorage in the

    customary port of export for the countries of Argentina, Australia,

    Barbados, Belize, Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, El

    Salvador, Ecuador, Fiji Islands, French Antilles, Guatemala, Honduras,

    India, Jamaica, Malawi, Mauritius, Mexico, Mozambique, Nicaragua, Peru,

    Republic of the Philippines, South Africa, Swaziland, Taiwan, Thailand,

    Trinidad, United States, and Zimbabwe;

    (16) ICE Futures U.S. Sugar No. 16 (SF) contract based on a trading

    unit of 112,000 pounds delivered at New York, Baltimore, Galveston, New

    Orleans, or Savannah;

    (17) Chicago Board of Trade Wheat (W) contract based on a trading

    unit of 5,000 bushels delivered at Chicago Switching District, the

    Burns Harbor, Indiana Switching District, the Northwest Ohio Territory,

    on Ohio River, on Mississippi River or the Toledo, Ohio Switching

    District, or the St. Louis-East St. Louis and Alton Switching

    Districts;

    (18) Minneapolis Grain Exchange Hard Red Spring Wheat (MWE)

    contract based on a trading unit of 5,000 bushels delivered at

    elevators located in Minneapolis/St. Paul, Red Wing, Duluth/Superior,

    Minnesota;

    (19) Kansas City Board of Trade Hard Winter Wheat (KW) contract

    based on a trading unit of 5,000 bushels delivered at elevators in

    Kansas City, Missouri/Kansas; Hutchinson, Kansas; Salina/Abilene,

    Kansas; or Wichita, Kansas.

    (b) Metals. The core referenced futures contracts include:

    (1) Commodity Exchange, Inc. Gold (GC) contract based on a trading

    unit of 100 troy ounces delivered at Exchange-licensed warehouses;

    (2) Commodity Exchange, Inc. Silver (SI) contract based on a

    trading unit of 5,000 troy ounces delivered at Exchange-licensed

    warehouses;

    (3) Commodity Exchange, Inc. Copper (HG) contract based on a

    trading unit of 25,000 pounds delivered at licensed warehouses;

    (4) New York Mercantile Exchange Palladium (PA) contract based on a

    trading unit of 100 troy ounces delivered at licensed warehouses; and

    (5) New York Mercantile Exchange Platinum (PL) contract based on a

    trading unit of 50 troy ounces pounds delivered at licensed warehouses.

    (c) Energy commodities. The core referenced futures contracts

    include:

    (1) New York Mercantile Exchange Light Sweet Crude Oil (CL)

    contract based on a trading unit of 1,000 U.S. barrels (42,000 gallons)

    delivered at the Cushing crude oil storage complex in Cushing,

    Oklahoma;

    (2) New York Mercantile Exchange New York Harbor No. 2 Heating Oil

    (HO) contract based on a trading unit of 1,000 U.S. barrels (42,000

    gallons) delivered at an ex-shore facility in New York Harbor;

    (3) New York Mercantile Exchange New York Harbor Gasoline

    Blendstock (RB) contract based on a trading unit of 1,000 U.S. barrels

    (42,000 gallons) delivered at an ex-shore facility in New York Harbor;

    and

    (4) New York Mercantile Exchange Henry Hub Natural Gas (NG)

    contract based on a trading unit of 10,000 million British thermal

    units (mmBtu) delivered at the Henry Hub pipeline interchange in Erath,

    Louisiana.

    Sec. 151.3 Referenced contract spot months.

    (a) Agricultural commodities. For referenced contracts based on

    agricultural commodities, the spot month shall be the period of time

    commencing:

    (1) At the close of business on the business day prior to the first

    notice day for any delivery month and terminating at the end of the

    delivery month for the following contracts:

    (i) ICE Futures U.S. Cocoa (CC) contract;

    (ii) ICE Futures U.S. Coffee C (KC) contract;

    (iii) ICE Futures U.S. Cotton No. 2 (CT) contract;

    (iv) ICE Futures U.S. FCOJ-A (OJ) contract;

    (2) At the close of business three business days prior to the first

    trading day in the delivery month and terminating at the end of the

    delivery month for the following contracts:

    (i) Chicago Board of Trade Corn (C) contract;

    (ii) Chicago Board of Trade Oats (O) contract;

    (iii) Chicago Board of Trade Rough Rice (RR) contract;

    (iv) Chicago Board of Trade Soybeans (S) contract;

    (v) Chicago Board of Trade Soybean Meal (SM) contract;

    (vi) Chicago Board of Trade Soybean Oil (BO) contract;

    (vii) Chicago Board of Trade Wheat (W) contract;

    (viii) Minneapolis Grain Exchange Hard Red Spring Wheat (MW)

    contract;

    (ix) Kansas City Board of Trade Hard Winter Wheat (KW) contract;

    (3) At the close of business two business days after the fifteenth

    calendar day of the contract month or the first business day after the

    fifteenth should the fifteenth day be a non-business day and

    terminating at the end

    [[Page 4770]]

    of the delivery month for the following contracts:

    (i) ICE Futures U.S. Sugar No. 11 (SB) contract;

    (ii) ICE Futures U.S. Sugar No. 16 (SF) contract;

    (4) At the close of business on the business day immediately

    preceding the last five business days of the contract month and

    terminating at the end of the delivery month for the Chicago Mercantile

    Exchange Live Cattle (LC) contract;

    (5) At the close of business on the eleventh day prior to the last

    trading day and terminating on the last day of trading for the contract

    month for the following contracts:

    (i) Chicago Mercantile Exchange Feeder Cattle (FC) contract;

    (ii) Chicago Mercantile Exchange Class III Milk (DA) contract;

    (6) At the period commencing at the close of business on the fifth

    day prior to the last trading day and terminating at the end of the

    delivery month for the Chicago Mercantile Exchange Lean Hog (LH)

    contract.

    (b) Metals. The spot month shall be the period of time commencing

    at the close of business on the business day prior to the first notice

    day for any delivery month and terminating at the end of the delivery

    month for the following contracts:

    (1) Commodity Exchange, Inc. Gold (GC) contract; and

    (2) Commodity Exchange, Inc. Silver (SI) contract.

    (3) Commodity Exchange, Inc. Copper (HG) contract;

    (4) New York Mercantile Exchange Palladium (PA) contract; and

    (5) New York Mercantile Exchange Platinum (PL) contract.

    (c) Energy commodities. The spot month shall be the period of time

    commencing at the close of business three business days prior to the

    last day of trading in the underlying referenced futures contract and

    terminating at the end of the delivery period for the following

    contracts:

    (1) New York Mercantile Exchange Light Sweet Crude Oil (CL)

    contract;

    (2) New York Mercantile Exchange New York Harbor No. 2 Heating Oil

    (HO) contract;

    (3) New York Mercantile Exchange New York Harbor Gasoline

    Blendstock (RB) contract; and

    (4) New York Mercantile Exchange Henry Hub Natural Gas (NG)

    contract.

    Sec. 151.4 Position limits for referenced contracts.

    (a) Spot-month position limits. Except as provided in paragraph (h)

    of this section for initial spot-month position limits, or as otherwise

    authorized by Sec. 151.5, no trader may hold or control positions,

    separately or in combination, net long or net short, in referenced

    contracts in the same commodity when such positions are in excess of:

    (1) For physical delivery referenced contracts, a spot-month

    position limit that shall be one-quarter of the estimated spot-month

    deliverable supply for a core referenced futures contract in the same

    commodity as fixed by the Commission pursuant to paragraph (c) of this

    section; or

    (2) For cash-settled referenced contracts, a spot-month position

    limit, equal to the level fixed by paragraph (a)(1) of this section, or

    a conditional-spot-month position limit, that is five times the spot-

    month position limit fixed by paragraph (a)(1) of this section,

    provided that the trader:

    (i) For cash-settled contracts in the spot month, shall not hold or

    control positions exceeding the level of any single month position

    limit;

    (ii) Does not hold or control positions in the physical delivery

    referenced contract based on the same commodity that is in such

    contract's spot month;

    (iii) Does not hold or control cash or forward positions in the

    referenced contract's spot month in an amount that is greater than one-

    quarter of the deliverable supply in the referenced contract's

    underlying commodity deliverable at the location or locations specified

    in the core referenced futures contract in the same commodity; and

    (iv) Has submitted a certification to the Commission, in the form

    and manner provided for in Sec. 151.10, that the trader meets the

    conditions of paragraphs (a)(2)(ii) and (iii) of this section.

    (b) Limited application of spot-month position limits. Spot-month

    position limits shall only apply to positions in physical delivery or

    cash settled referenced contracts with delivery locations that match

    the delivery locations of a core referenced futures contracts in the

    same commodity.

    (c) Deliverable supply.

    (1) For the purpose of applying the spot-month position limit or

    conditional spot-month-position limit in paragraph (a) of this section,

    the Commission shall set the levels of deliverable supply in accordance

    with the procedure in paragraph (h) of this section.

    (2) Each designated contract market shall submit to the Commission

    an estimate of deliverable supply by the 31st of December of each

    calendar year for each physical delivery referenced contract that is

    subject to a spot-month position limit and listed or executed pursuant

    to the rules of the designated contract market.

    (3) The estimate submitted under paragraph (c)(2) of this section

    shall be accompanied by a description of the methodology used to derive

    the estimate along with any statistical data supporting the designated

    contract market's estimate of deliverable supply.

    (4) In fixing spot-month position limits under paragraph (a)(1) of

    this section, the Commission shall rely on the estimate provided under

    paragraph (c)(2) of this section unless the Commission determines to

    rely on its own estimate of deliverable supply.

    (d) Non-spot position limits. Except as otherwise authorized in

    Sec. 151.5, no person may hold or control positions, separately or in

    combination, net long or net short, in referenced contracts in the same

    commodity when such positions, in all months combined (including the

    spot month) or in a single month, are in excess of:

    (1) An all-months-combined aggregate and single-month position

    limits, fixed by the Commission at 10 percent of the first 25,000

    contracts of average all-months-combined aggregated open interest, as

    calculated by the Commission pursuant to paragraph (e) of this section,

    with a marginal increase of 2.5 percent thereafter;

    (2) A class all-months-combined and single-month position limit,

    fixed by the Commission, for referenced contracts that are contracts of

    the same class, at a level equal to the all-months-combined aggregate

    position limit.

    (3) Legacy position limits. Except as otherwise authorized by Sec.

    151.5, no trader may hold or control positions, separately or in

    combination, net long or net short, in referenced contracts in the same

    commodity for the commodities enumerated below, when such positions, in

    all-months-combined or in a single-month, are in excess of the

    following position limits:

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

    Position

    Referenced contract limits

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

    Chicago Board of Trade Corn (C) contract................ 22,000

    Chicago Board of Trade Oats (O) contract................ 2,000

    Chicago Board of Trade Soybeans (S) contract............ 10,000

    Chicago Board of Trade Wheat (W) contract............... 6,500

    Chicago Board of Trade Soybean Oil (BO) contract........ 6,500

    Chicago Board of Trade Soybean Meal (SM) contract....... 6,500

    Minneapolis Grain Exchange Hard Red Spring Wheat (MW) 6,500

    contract...............................................

    ICE Futures U.S. Cotton No. 2 (CT) contract............. 5,000

    [[Page 4771]]

    Kansas City Board of Trade Hard Winter Wheat (KW) 6,500

    contract...............................................

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

    (e) Aggregated open interest calculations. For the purpose of

    determining the speculative position limits in paragraph (d) of this

    section and in accordance with the procedure in paragraph (h) the

    Commission shall determine:

    (1) For determining aggregate and class all-month-combined and

    single-month position limits under paragraph (d) of this section, the

    average all-months-combined aggregate open interest, is the sum for a

    calendar year of values obtained under paragraphs (e)(2) and (e)(3) of

    this section, then divided by 12, for the twelve months prior to the

    effective date.

    (2) The all-months futures open interest is, at month end, the sum

    of all of a referenced contract's all-months-combined open futures and

    option contract (on a delta adjusted basis) open interests across all

    designated contract markets;

    (3) The all-months swaps open interest, at month end, the sum of

    all of a referenced contract's all-months-combined open swaps and

    swaptions open interest, combining, open interest attributed to cleared

    and uncleared swaps and swaptions, where the uncleared all-months-

    combined swap open interest shall be the absolute sum of all swap

    dealers' net uncleared open swaps and swaptions exposures by

    counterparty and by single referenced contract month.

    (f) Netting of positions. (1) For referenced contracts in the spot

    month, a trader's positions in physical delivery and cash-settled

    contracts are calculated separately and traders can have up to the

    spot-month position limit in both the physically delivered and cash

    settled contracts unless the cash settled contract positions are held

    pursuant to the conditional-spot-month position limit.

    (2) For the purpose of applying non-spot-month position limits, a

    trader's position shall be combined and the net resulting position

    shall be applied towards determining the trader's aggregate single-

    month and all-months-combined position.

    (3) For the purpose of applying non-spot-month class limits, a

    trader's position in contracts of the same class shall be combined and

    the net resulting position shall be applied towards determining the

    trader's class single-month and all-months-combined position.

    (g) Additional provisions. In determining or calculating all levels

    and limits under this section, a resulting number shall be rounded up

    to the nearest hundred contracts.

    (h) Process for fixing and publishing position limits. (1) With the

    exception of initial position limits, the Commission shall fix position

    limits under this part by January 31st of each calendar year;

    (2) The initial spot-month position limits for referenced contracts

    shall be as provided in Appendix A to this part.

    (3) The initial spot-month, single-month and all-months-combined

    position limits must be made effective pursuant to a Commission order

    and may be made on any date.

    (4) The Commission shall publish position limits on the

    Commission's Web site at http://www.cftc.gov prior to making such

    limits effective, and such limits, other than initial limits, shall

    become effective on the 1st day of March immediately following the

    fixing date and shall remain effective up until and including the last

    day of the immediately following February.

    Sec. 151.5 Exemptions for referenced contracts.

    (a) Bona fide hedging transactions or positions.

    (1) Any trader that complies with the requirements of this section

    may exceed the position limits set forth in Sec. 151.4 to the extent

    that a transaction or position in a referenced contract:

    (i) Represents a substitute for transactions made or to be made or

    positions taken or to be taken at a later time in a physical marketing

    channel;

    (ii) Is economically appropriate to the reduction of risks in the

    conduct and management of a commercial enterprise; and

    (iii) Arises from the potential change in the value of--

    (A) Assets that a person owns, produces, manufactures, processes,

    or merchandises or anticipates owning, producing, manufacturing,

    processing, or merchandising;

    (B) Liabilities that a person owns or anticipates incurring; or

    (C) Services that a person provides or purchases, or anticipates

    providing or purchasing; or

    (iv) Reduces risks attendant to a position resulting from a swap

    that--

    (A) Was executed opposite a counterparty for which the transaction

    would qualify as a bona fide hedging transaction pursuant to paragraph

    (a)(1)(i) through (a)(1)(iii) of this section; or

    (B) Meets the requirements of paragraphs (a)(1)(i) through

    (a)(1)(iii) of this section. Notwithstanding the foregoing, no

    transactions or positions shall be classified as bona fide hedging for

    purposes of Sec. 151.4 unless such transactions or positions are

    established and liquidated in an orderly manner in accordance with

    sound commercial practices and the provisions of paragraph (a)(2) of

    this section have been satisfied.

    (2) Enumerated Hedging Transactions. The definition of bona fide

    hedging transactions and positions in paragraph (a)(1) of this section

    includes the following specific transactions and positions:

    (i) Sales of any commodity underlying referenced contracts which do

    not exceed in quantity:

    (A) Ownership or fixed-price purchase of the contract's underlying

    cash commodity by the same person; or

    (B) Unsold anticipated production of the same commodity, which may

    not exceed one year for referenced agricultural contracts, by the same

    person provided that no such position is maintained in any referenced

    contract during the five last trading days of that referenced contract.

    (ii) Purchases of referenced contracts which do not exceed in

    quantity:

    (A) The fixed-price sale of the contract's underlying cash

    commodity by the same person;

    (B) The quantity equivalent of fixed-price sales of the cash

    products and by-products of such commodity by the same person; or

    (C) Unfilled anticipated requirements of the same cash commodity,

    which may not exceed one year for referenced agricultural contracts,

    for processing, manufacturing, or feeding by the same person, provided

    that such transactions and positions in the five last trading days of

    any referenced contract do not exceed the person's unfilled anticipated

    requirements of the same cash commodity for that month and the next

    succeeding month.

    (iii) Offsetting sales and purchases in referenced contracts which

    do not exceed in quantity that amount of the same cash commodity which

    has been bought and sold by the same person at unfixed prices basis

    different delivery months of the referenced contract, provided that no

    such position is maintained during the five last trading days of any

    referenced contract.

    (iv) Purchases or sales by an agent who does not own or has not

    contracted to sell or purchase the offsetting cash commodity at a fixed

    price, provided that the person is responsible for the merchandising of

    the cash positions which is being offset and the agent has a

    contractual arrangement with the person who owns the commodity or

    [[Page 4772]]

    holds the cash market commitment being offset.

    (v) Sales and purchases in referenced contracts described in

    paragraphs (a)(2)(i), (a)(2)(ii), (a)(2)(iii), and (a)(2)(iv) of this

    section may also be offset other than by the same quantity of the same

    cash commodity, provided that the fluctuations in value of the position

    in referenced contracts are substantially related to the fluctuations

    in value of the actual or anticipated cash position, and provided that

    the positions shall not be maintained during the five last trading days

    of any referenced contract.

    (b) Information on cash market commodity activities. Any trader

    with a position that exceeds the position limits set forth in Sec.

    151.4 pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section shall submit to the

    Commission a 404 filing, in the form and manner provided for in Sec.

    151.10, containing the following information with respect to such

    position:

    (1) The cash market commodity hedged, the units in which it is

    measured, and the corresponding referenced contract that is used for

    hedging the cash market commodity;

    (2) The number of referenced contracts used for hedging;

    (3) The entire quantity of stocks owned of the cash market

    commodity that is being hedged by a position in a referenced contract;

    (4) The entire quantity of open fixed price purchase commitments in

    the hedged commodity outside of the spot month of the corresponding

    referenced contract;

    (5) The entire quantity of open fixed price purchase commitments in

    the hedged commodity in the spot month of the corresponding referenced

    contract;

    (6) The entire quantity of open fixed price sale commitments in the

    hedged commodity outside of the spot month of the corresponding

    referenced contract; and

    (7) The entire quantity of open fixed price sale commitments in the

    hedged commodity in the spot month of the corresponding referenced

    contract.

    (c) Anticipatory hedge exemptions. (1) Initial statement. Any

    trader who wishes to exceed the position limits set forth in Sec.

    151.4 pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section in order to hedge

    unsold anticipated commercial production or unfilled anticipated

    commercial requirements connected to a commodity underlying a

    referenced contract, shall submit to the Commission a 404A filing at

    least ten days in advance of the date that such transactions or

    positions would be in excess of the position limits set forth in Sec.

    151.4. The 404A filing shall be made in the form and manner provided in

    Sec. 151.10 and shall contain the following information with respect

    to such position:

    (i) The cash market commodity and units for which the anticipated

    production or requirements pertain;

    (ii) The dates for the beginning and end of the period for which

    the person claims the anticipatory hedge exemption is required, which

    may not exceed one year;

    (iii) The production or requirement of that cash market commodity

    for the three complete fiscal years preceding the current fiscal year;

    (iv) The anticipated production or requirements for the period

    hedged, which may not exceed one year;

    (v) The unsold anticipated production or unfilled anticipated

    requirements across the period hedged, which may not exceed one year;

    (vi) The referenced contract that the trader will use to hedge the

    unfilled, anticipated production or requirements; and

    (vii) The number of referenced contracts that will be used for

    hedging.

    (2) Approval. All or a specified portion of the unsold anticipated

    production or unfilled anticipated requirements described in these

    filings shall not be considered as offsetting positions for bona fide

    hedging transactions or positions if such person is so notified by the

    Commission within ten days after the Commission is furnished with the

    information required under this paragraph (c).

    (i) The Commission may request the person so notified to file

    specific additional information with the Commission to support a

    determination that the statement filed accurately reflects unsold

    anticipated production or unfilled anticipated requirements.

    (ii) The Commission shall consider all additional information filed

    and, by notice to such person, shall specify its determination as to

    what portion of the production or requirements described constitutes

    unsold anticipated production or unfilled anticipated requirements for

    the purposes of bona fide hedging.

    (3) Supplemental reports. Whenever the sales or purchases which a

    person wishes to consider as bona fide hedging of unsold anticipated

    production or unfilled anticipated requirements shall exceed the

    amounts in the most recent filing or the amounts determined by the

    Commission to constitute unsold anticipated production or unfilled

    anticipated requirements pursuant to paragraph (c)(2) of this section,

    such person shall file with the Commission a statement which updates

    the information provided in the person's most recent filing, and for

    instances anticipated needs exceed the amounts in the most recent

    filing, at least ten days in advance of the date that person wishes to

    exceed these amounts.

    (d) Additional information from swap counterparties to bona fide

    hedging transactions. All persons that enter into swap transactions or

    maintain swap positions pursuant to paragraph (a)(1)(iv) of this

    section shall also submit to the Commission a 404S filing not later

    than 9:00 a.m. on the business day following that to which the

    information pertains. The 404S filing shall be done in the form and

    manner provided for in Sec. 151.10 and shall contain the following

    information:

    (1) The commodity reference price for the swaps that would qualify

    as a bona fide hedging transaction or position;

    (2) The entire gross long and gross short quantity underlying the

    swaps that were executed in a transaction that would qualify as a bona

    fide hedging transaction, and the units in which the quantity is

    measured;

    (3) The referenced contract that is used to offset the exposure

    obtained from the bona fide hedging transaction or position of the

    counterparty;

    (4) The gross long or gross short size of the position used to

    offset the exposure obtained from a bona fide hedging transaction or

    position of the counterparty;

    (5) The gross long or gross short size of the position used to

    offset the exposure obtained from a bona fide hedging swap transaction

    or position that is in the spot month.

    (e) Recordkeeping. Traders who qualify for bona fide hedge

    exemptions for cash market positions, anticipatory hedging, and swaps

    opposite counterparties that would qualify as bona fide hedging

    transactions or positions shall maintain complete books and records

    concerning all of their related cash, futures, and swap positions and

    transactions and make such books and records, along with a list of swap

    counterparties, available to the Commission upon request.

    (f) Conversion methodology for swaps not involving the same

    commodity. In addition to the information required under this section,

    traders engaged in the hedging of commercial activity or positions

    resulting from swaps that are used for the hedging of commercial

    activity that does not involve the same quantity or commodity as the

    quantity or commodity associated with positions in referenced contracts

    that are used to hedge shall submit to the Commission a 404, 404A, or

    404S filing, as

    [[Page 4773]]

    appropriate, containing the following information:

    (1) Conversion information both in terms of the actual quantity and

    commodity used in the trader's normal course of business and in terms

    of the referenced contracts that are sold or purchased; and

    (2) An explanation of the methodology used for determining the

    ratio of conversion between the actual or anticipated cash positions

    and the trader's positions in referenced contracts.

    (g) Requirements for bona fide hedging swap counterparties. Upon

    entering into a swap transaction where at least one party is relying on

    a bona fide hedge exemption to exceed the position limits of Sec.

    151.4 with respect to such a swap:

    (1) The party not hedging a cash market commodity risk, or both

    parties to the swap if both parties are hedging a cash market commodity

    risk, shall:

    (i) Ask for a written representation from its counterparty

    verifying that the swap qualifies as a bona fide hedging transaction

    under paragraph (a)(1)(iv) of this section; and

    (ii) Upon receipt of such written representation from the

    counterparty, provide written confirmation of such receipt to the

    counterparty.

    (2) The party relying on the bona fide hedging exemption to enter

    into the swap transaction shall submit a written representation to its

    counterparty verifying that the swap qualifies as a bona fide hedging

    transaction, as defined in paragraph (a)(1)(iv) of this section.

    (h) The written representation and receipt confirmation described

    in paragraph (g) of this section shall be retained by the parties to

    the swap and provided to the Commission upon request.

    (i) Filing requirement for bona fide hedgers. Any party with cash

    market commodity risk relying on a bona fide hedging exemption to enter

    into and maintain a referenced contract position shall submit to the

    Commission a 404S filing, in the form and manner provided for in Sec.

    151.10, containing the information in paragraphs (b) and (c) of this

    section, for each business day on which such position was maintained,

    up to and including the day after the trader's position level is below

    the position limit that was exceeded.

    (j) Positions that are maintained. For a swap that satisfies the

    requirements of paragraph (a) of this section, the party to whom the

    cash market commodity risk is transferred may itself establish, lift

    and re-establish a position in excess of the position limits of Sec.

    151.4 provided that:

    (1) The party and its counterparty comply with the requirements of

    paragraphs (g) through (i) of this section; and

    (2) The party may only exceed such position limit to the extent and

    in such amounts that the qualifying swap directly offsets, and

    continues to offset, the cash market commodity risk of a bona fide

    hedging counterparty.

    Sec. 151.6 Position visibility.

    (a) Visibility levels. A trader holding or controlling, separately

    or in combination, net long or net short, referenced contracts in the

    following commodities when such positions in all months or in any

    single month (including the spot month) are in excess of the following

    position levels, shall comply with the reporting requirements of

    paragraphs (b) through (d) of this section:

    Visibility Levels for Referenced Metals Contracts

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

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

    New York Mercantile Exchange Copper (HG)..................... 4,200

    New York Mercantile Exchange Palladium (PA).................. 900

    New York Mercantile Exchange Platinum (PL)................... 1,400

    New York Mercantile Exchange Gold (GC)....................... 10,700

    New York Mercantile Exchange Silver (SI)..................... 4,500

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

    Visibility Levels for Referenced Energy Contracts

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

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

    New York Mercantile Exchange Light Sweet Crude Oil (CL)...... 22,500

    New York Mercantile Exchange New York Harbor Gasoline 7,800

    Blendstock (RB).............................................

    New York Mercantile Exchange Henry Hub Natural Gas (NG)...... 21,000

    New York Mercantile Exchange New York Harbor No. 2 Heating 9,900

    Oil (HO)....................................................

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

    (b) Statement of trader exceeding visibility level. Upon acquiring

    a position in referenced contracts in the same commodity that reaches

    or exceeds a visibility level, a trader shall submit to the Commission

    a 401 filing for the position in a referenced contract, separately by

    futures, options, swaps, or swaptions that comprise the position in the

    form and manner provided for in Sec. 151.10, and shall containing the

    following information:

    (1) The date on which the trader's position initially reached or

    exceeded the visibility level;

    (2) Gross long and gross short positions on an all-months-combined

    basis (using economically reasonable and analytically supported

    deltas);

    (3) If the visibility levels are reached or exceeded in any single

    month, the contract month and the trader's gross long and short

    positions in the relevant single month (using economically reasonable

    and analytically supported deltas); and

    (4) If applicable, the trader shall also certify that they do not

    hold or control positions subject to the filing requirements of

    paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section.

    (c) Related uncleared swaps position report. Upon acquiring a

    position in referenced contracts in the same commodity that reaches or

    exceeds a visibility level, a trader shall submit to the Commission a

    402S filing for any uncleared swap positions that are based on

    substantially the same commodity as that which underlies the referenced

    contract. The 402S filing shall be done in the form and manner provided

    for in Sec. 151.10 and shall contain the following information for the

    date on which the trader's position initially reached or exceeded the

    visibility level:

    (1) By commodity reference price;

    (2) By swaps or swaptions;

    (3) By open swap end dates within 30 days, 90 days, one year or

    outside of one year from the date on which the trader's position

    initially reached or exceeded the visibility level; and

    (4) Gross long and gross short positions on a futures equivalent

    basis in terms of the referenced contract; or

    (5) With the express written permission of the Commission or its

    designees, the submission of a swaps portfolio summary statement

    spreadsheet in digital format, only insofar as the spreadsheet provides

    at least the same data as that required by the 402S filing, may be

    substituted for the reporting requirements of the 402S filing.

    (d) Any trader above a visibility level that holds or controls cash

    market commodity positions or has anticipated commercial requirements

    or unsold anticipated commercial production in the same or

    substantially the same commodity shall submit to the Commission 404 and

    404A filings respectively. Such 404 and 404A filings shall be done in

    the form and manner provided for in Sec. 151.10 and shall contain

    information regarding such positions as described in Sec. 151.5(b) and

    (c). Notwithstanding this requirement, a visible trader may

    alternatively, upon written permission by the Commission or its

    designees, submit in digital format a physical commodity portfolio

    [[Page 4774]]

    summary statement spreadsheet, provided that such spreadsheet contains

    at least the same data as that required by the 404 or 404A filing.

    (e) Reporting obligations imposed by regulations other than those

    contained in this section shall supersede the reporting requirements of

    paragraphs (b), (c), and (d) of this section but only insofar as other

    reporting obligations provide at least the same data and are submitted

    to the Commission or its designees at least as often as the reporting

    requirements of paragraphs (b), (c), and (d) of this section.

    Sec. 151.7 Aggregation of positions.

    (a) Positions to be aggregated. The position limits set forth in

    Sec. 151.4 shall apply to all positions in accounts for which any

    trader by power of attorney or otherwise directly or indirectly holds

    positions or controls trading and to positions held by two or more

    traders acting pursuant to an expressed or implied agreement or

    understanding the same as if the positions were held by, or the trading

    of the position were done by, a single individual.

    (b) Ownership of accounts generally. For the purpose of applying

    the position limits set forth in Sec. 151.4, any trader holding

    positions in more than one account, or holding accounts or positions in

    which the trader by power of attorney or otherwise directly or

    indirectly has a 10 percent or greater ownership or equity interest,

    must aggregate all such accounts or positions.

    (c) Ownership by limited partners, shareholders or other pool

    participants. (1) Except as provided in paragraphs (c)(2) and (c)(3) of

    this section, a trader that is a limited partner, shareholder or other

    similar type of pool participant with an ownership or equity interest

    of 10 percent or greater in a pooled account or positions need not

    aggregate such pooled positions or accounts if:

    (i) The pool operator has, and enforces, written procedures to

    preclude the trader from having knowledge of, gaining access to, or

    receiving data about the trading or positions of the pool;

    (ii) The trader does not have direct, day-to-day supervisory

    authority or control over the pool's trading decisions; and

    (iii) The pool operator has complied with the requirements of

    paragraph (g) of this section and has received an exemption from

    aggregation on behalf of the trader or a class of traders from the

    Commission.

    (2) A commodity pool operator having ownership or equity interest

    of 10 percent or greater in an account or positions as a limited

    partner, shareholder or other similar type of pool participant must

    aggregate those accounts or positions with all other accounts or

    positions owned or controlled by the commodity pool operator.

    (3) Each limited partner, shareholder, or other similar type of

    pool participant having an ownership or equity interest of 25 percent

    or greater in a commodity pool must aggregate the pooled account or

    positions with all other accounts or positions owned or controlled by

    that trader.

    (d) Identical trading. For the purpose of applying the position

    limits set forth in Sec. 151.4, any trader that holds or controls the

    trading of positions, by power of attorney or otherwise, in more than

    one account, or that holds or controls trading of accounts or positions

    in multiple pools, with identical trading strategies must aggregate all

    such accounts or positions.

    (e) Trading control by futures commission merchants. The position

    limits set forth in Sec. 151.4 shall be construed to apply to all

    positions held by a futures commission merchant or its separately

    organized affiliates in a discretionary account, or in an account which

    is part of, or participates in, or receives trading advice from a

    customer trading program of a futures commission merchant or any of the

    officers, partners, or employees of such futures commission merchant or

    its separately organized affiliates, unless:

    (1) A trader other than the futures commission merchant or the

    affiliate directs trading in such an account;

    (2) The futures commission merchant or the affiliate maintains only

    such minimum control over the trading in such an account as is

    necessary to fulfill its duty to supervise diligently trading in the

    account;

    (3) Each trading decision of the discretionary account or the

    customer trading program is determined independently of all trading

    decisions in other accounts which the futures commission merchant or

    the affiliate holds, has a financial interest of 10 percent or more in,

    or controls; and

    (4) The futures commission merchant has complied with the

    requirements of paragraph (g) of this section and has received an

    exemption from aggregation from the Commission.

    (f) Owned non-financial entities. An entity need not aggregate its

    positions with the positions of one of its owned non-financial

    entities, as defined in Sec. 151.1, if it can sufficiently

    demonstrate, in an application for exemption submitted under paragraph

    (g) of this section, that the owned non-financial entity's trading is

    independently controlled and managed, indicia of which include:

    (1) The entity and its other affiliates have no knowledge of

    trading decisions by the owned non-financial entity, and the owned non-

    financial entity has no knowledge of trading decisions by the entity or

    any of the entity's other affiliates;

    (2) The owned non-financial entity's trading decisions are

    controlled by persons employed exclusively by the owned non-financial

    entity, who do not in any way share trading control with persons

    employed by the entity;

    (3) The owned non-financial entity maintains and enforces written

    policies and procedures to preclude the entity or any of its affiliates

    from having knowledge of, gaining access to, or receiving information

    or data about its positions, trades or trading strategies, including

    document routing and other procedures or security arrangements; and

    (4) The owned non-financial entity maintains a risk management

    system that is separate from the risk management system of the entity

    and any of its other affiliates.

    (5) Any other factors the Commission may consider, in its

    discretion, that indicate that the owned non-financial entity's trading

    is independently controlled and managed.

    (g) Applications for exemption. (1) Entities seeking an exemption

    from the position limits established by the Commission pursuant to this

    section, shall file an initial application for an exemption providing

    as part of the application all information required by the Commission,

    including but not limited to information:

    (i) Describing the relevant circumstances that warrant

    disaggregation;

    (ii) Providing an independent assessment report on the operation of

    the policies and procedures described in Sec. 151.9(c)(1)(iii) for

    pool operators and Sec. 151.9(f)(3) for owned non-financial entities;

    (iii) Designating an office and employee(s) of the entity, with

    salaries and compensation that are independent of trading profits and

    losses, which shall be responsible for the coordination of aggregation

    rules and position limit compliance;

    (iv) Providing an organizational chart that includes the name, main

    business address, main business telephone number, main facsimile number

    and main e-mail address of the entity and each of its affiliates;

    (v) Providing the names of pertinent employees of the entity

    (trading, operations, compliance, risk

    [[Page 4775]]

    management and legal) and their work locations and contact information;

    (vi) Providing a description of all information-sharing systems,

    bulletin boards, and common e-mail addresses;

    (vii) Providing an explanation of the entity's risk management

    system;

    (viii) Providing an explanation of how and to whom the trade data

    and position information is distributed, including which officers

    receive reports and their respective titles; and

    (ix) A signature by a representative duly authorized to bind the

    entity.

    (2) An application shall be submitted within the time specified by

    the Commission and in the form and manner provided for in Sec. 151.10.

    Sec. 151.8 Foreign boards of trade.

    The aggregate position limits in Sec. 151.4 shall apply to a

    trader with positions in referenced contracts executed on, or pursuant

    to the rules of a foreign board of trade, provided that:

    (a) Such referenced contracts settle against the price (including

    the daily or final settlement price) of one or more contracts listed

    for trading on a registered entity; and

    (b) The foreign board of trade makes available such referenced

    contracts to its members or other participants located in the United

    States through direct access to its electronic trading and order

    matching system.

    Sec. 151.9 Preexisting positions.

    (a) The position limits set forth in Sec. 151.2 of this chapter

    may be exceeded to the extent that such positions remain open and were

    entered into in good faith prior to the effective date of any rule,

    regulation, or order that specifies a position limit under this part.

    (b) Swap and swaption positions entered into in good faith prior to

    the effective date of any rule, regulation, or order that specifies a

    position limit under this part may be netted with post-effective date

    swap and swaptions for the purpose of applying any position limit.

    (c) Swap and swaption positions entered into in good faith prior to

    the effective date of any rule, regulation or order that specifies a

    position limit under this part shall not be aggregated with positions

    in referenced contracts that were entered into after the effective date

    of such a rule, regulation or order.

    Sec. 151.10 Form and manner of reporting and submitting information

    or filings.

    Unless otherwise instructed by the Commission or its designees, any

    person submitting reports under this section shall submit the

    corresponding required filings and any other information required under

    this part to the Commission as follows:

    (a) Using the format, coding structure, and electronic data

    transmission procedures approved in writing by the Commission; and

    (b) Not later than 9 a.m. on the next business day following the

    reporting or filing obligation is incurred unless:

    (1) A 404A filing is submitted pursuant Sec. 151.5(c), in which

    case the filing must be submitted at least ten days in advance of the

    date that transactions and positions would be established that would

    exceed a position limit set forth in Sec. 151.4;

    (2) A 404 or 404S filing is submitted pursuant to Sec. 151.5, in

    which case the filing must be submitted the day after a position limit

    is exceeded and all days the trader exceeds such levels and the first

    day after the trader's position is below the position limit;

    (3) The filing is submitted pursuant to Sec. 151.6 and not under

    any other part under this title, then the 401, 402S, 404, or 404A

    filing, or their respective substitutes as provided for under Sec.

    151.6(c)(5) and (d), shall be submitted after the establishment of a

    position exceeding a visibility level on the latter of either (i) 9

    a.m. five business day after such time or (ii) 9 a.m. the first

    business day of the subsequent calendar month. If the filing is

    submitted pursuant to Sec. 151.6 and not under any other part under

    this title, the filing trader shall be required to submit a 401, 402S,

    404, or 404A filing, or their respective substitutes, no more often

    than once per calendar month; or

    (4) An application for exemption renewal is filed pursuant to Sec.

    151.7(g)(1), in which case the filing shall be submitted within 30

    calendar days of January 1 of each year following the initial

    application for exemption.

    Sec. 151.11 Registered entity position limits.

    (a) Generally. (1) Registered entities shall adopt, and establish

    rules and procedures for monitoring and enforcing spot-month, single-

    month, and all-months-combined position limits with respect to

    agreements, contracts or transactions executed pursuant to their rules

    that are no greater than the position limits specified in Sec. 151.4.

    (2) For agreements, contracts or transactions with no Federal

    limits, or with respect to levels of open interest to which no Federal

    limits apply, registered entities that are trading facilities shall

    adopt spot-month, single-month and all-months-combined position limits

    based on the methodology in 151.4, provided, however, that a registered

    entity may adopt, notwithstanding the methodology in 151.4, single-

    month or all-months-combined limit levels of 1,000 contracts for

    tangible commodities other than energy products and 5,000 contracts for

    energy products and non-tangible commodities, including contracts on

    financial products.

    (3) Securities futures products. Position limits for securities

    futures products are specified in Part 41.

    (b) Alternatives. For a contract that is not subject to a Federal

    position limit, registered entities may adopt position accountability

    rules with respect to any agreement, contract or transaction:

    (1) On a major foreign currency, for which there is no legal

    impediment to delivery and for which there exists a highly liquid cash

    market; or

    (2) On an excluded commodity that is an index or measure of

    inflation, or other macroeconomic index or measure; or

    (3) On an excluded commodity that meets the definition of section

    1.13(ii), (iii), or (iv) of the Act; or

    (4) On an excluded commodity having an average open interest of

    50,000 contracts and an average daily trading volume of 100,000

    contracts and a highly liquid cash market.

    (c) Aggregation. Position limits or accountability rules

    established under this section shall be subject to the aggregation

    standards of Sec. 151.7.

    (d) Exemptions. (1) Hedge exemptions. (i) For purposes of exempt

    and agricultural commodities, no designated contract market or swap

    execution facility bylaw, rule, regulation, or resolution adopted

    pursuant to this section shall apply to any position that would

    otherwise be exempt from the applicable Federal speculative position

    limits as determined by Sec. 151.5; provided, however, that the

    designated contract market or swap execution facility may limit bona

    fide hedging positions or any other positions which have been exempted

    pursuant to Sec. 151.5 which it determines are not in accord with

    sound commercial practices or exceed an amount which may be established

    and liquidated in an orderly fashion.

    (ii) For purposes of excluded commodities, no designated contract

    market or swap execution facility bylaw, rule, regulation or resolution

    adopted pursuant to this section shall apply to any transaction or

    position defined under Sec. 1.3(z); provided, however, that the

    designated contract market or swap execution facility may limit bona

    fide hedging positions which it determines are not in accord with sound

    commercial practices or exceed an amount which may be established and

    liquidated in an orderly fashion.

    [[Page 4776]]

    (2) Procedure. Persons seeking to establish eligibility for an

    exemption must comply with the procedures of the designated contract

    market or swap execution facility for granting exemptions from its

    speculative position limit rules. In considering whether to permit or

    grant an exemption, a contract market or swap execution facility must

    take into account sound commercial practices and paragraph (d)(1) of

    this section apply principles while remaining consistent with Sec.

    151.5.

    (f) Other exemptions. Speculative position limits adopted pursuant

    to this section shall not apply to:

    (1) any position acquired in good faith prior to the effective date

    of any bylaw, rule, regulation, or resolution which specifies such

    limit; or

    (2) any person that is registered as a futures commission merchant

    or as a floor broker under authority of the Act, except to the extent

    that transactions made by such person are made on behalf of or for the

    account or benefit of such person.

    (g) Ongoing responsibilities. Nothing in this Part shall be

    construed to affect any provisions of the Act relating to manipulation

    or corners or to relieve any designated contract market, swap execution

    facility, or governing board of a designated contract market or swap

    execution facility from its responsibility under other provisions of

    the Act and regulations.

    Sec. 151.12 Delegation of authority to the Director of the Division

    of Market Oversight.

    (a) The Commission hereby delegates, until it orders otherwise, to

    the Director of the Division of Market Oversight or such other employee

    or employees as the Director may designate from time to time, the

    authority:

    (1) In Sec. 151.4(e) for determining levels of open interest;

    (2) In Sec. 151.5 for granting exemptions relating to bona fide

    hedging transactions; and

    (3) In Sec. 151.10 for providing instructions or determining the

    format, coding structure, and electronic data transmission procedures

    for submitting data records and any other information required under

    this part.

    (b) The Director of the Division of Market Oversight may submit to

    the Commission for its consideration any matter which has been

    delegated in this section.

    (c) Nothing in this section prohibits the Commission, at its

    election, from exercising the authority delegated in this section.

    Appendix A to Part 151

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

    Spot month

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

    Current federal Current

    Contract limit exchange limit

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

    Agricultural Contracts

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

    Cocoa............................... ................ 1,000

    Coffee.............................. ................ 500

    Corn................................ 600 600

    Cotton No. 2........................ 300 300

    Feeder Cattle....................... ................ 300

    Frozen Concentrated Orange Juice.... ................ 300

    Lean Hogs........................... ................ 950

    Live Cattle......................... ................ 450

    Milk Class III...................... ................ 1,500

    Oats................................ 600 600

    Rough Rice.......................... ................ 600

    Soybeans............................ 600 600

    Soybean Meal........................ 720 720

    Soybean Oil......................... 540 540

    Sugar No. 11........................ ................ 5,000

    Sugar No. 16........................ ................ 1,000

    Wheat (CBOT)........................ 600 600

    Wheat, Hard Red Spring.............. 600 600

    Wheat, Hard Winter.................. 600 600

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

    Base Metals Contracts

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

    Copper Grade 1............. ................ 1,200

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

    Precious Metals Contracts

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

    Gold................................ ................ 3,000

    Palladium........................... ................ 650

    Platinum............................ ................ 150

    Silver.............................. ................ 1,500

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

    Energy Contracts

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

    Crude Oil, Light Sweet (``WTI'').... ................ 3,000

    Gasoline Blendstock (RBOB).......... ................ 1,000

    Natural Gas......................... ................ 1,000

    No. 2 Heating Oil, New York Harbor.. ................ 1,000

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

    [[Page 4777]]

    Issued by the Commission, this 13th day of January 2011, in

    Washington, DC.

    David Stawick,

    Secretary of the Commission.

    Appendices to Position Limits for Derivatives--Commission Voting

    Summary and Statements of Commissioners

    Note: The following appendices will not appear in the Code of

    Federal Regulations

    Appendix 1--Commission Voting Summary

    On this matter, Chairman Gensler and Commissioners Dunn, Chilton

    and O'Malia voted in the affirmative; Commissioner Sommers voted in

    the negative.

    Appendix 2--Statement of Chairman Gary Gensler

    I support the proposed rulemaking to establish position limits

    for physical commodity derivatives. The CFTC does not set or

    regulate prices. Rather, the Commission is directed to ensure that

    commodity markets are fair and orderly to protect the American

    public.

    When the CFTC set position limits in the past, the agency sought

    to ensure that the markets were made up of a broad group of market

    participants with a diversity of views. At the core of our

    obligations is promoting market integrity, which the agency has

    historically interpreted to include ensuring markets do not become

    too concentrated.

    Position limits help to protect the markets both in times of

    clear skies and when there is a storm on the horizon. In 1981, the

    Commission said that ``the capacity of any contract market to absorb

    the establishment and liquidation of large speculative positions in

    an orderly manner is related to the relative size of such positions,

    i.e., the capacity of the market is not unlimited.''

    Today's proposal would implement important new authorities in

    the Dodd-Frank Act to prevent excessive speculation and manipulation

    in the derivatives markets. The Dodd-Frank Act expanded the scope of

    the Commission's mandate to set position limits to include certain

    swaps. The proposal re-establishes position limits in agriculture,

    energy and metals markets. It includes one position limits regime

    for the spot month and another regime for single-month and all-

    months combined limits. It would implement spot-month limits, which

    are currently set in agriculture, energy and metals markets, sooner

    than the single-month or all-months-combined limits. Single-month

    and all-months-combined limits, which currently are only set for

    certain agricultural contracts, would be re-established in the

    energy and metals markets and be extended to certain swaps. These

    limits will be set using the formula proposed today based upon data

    on the total size of the swaps and futures market collected through

    the position reporting rule the Commission hopes to finalize early

    next year. It is only with the passage and implementation of the

    Dodd-Frank Act that the Commission will have broad authority to

    collect data in the swaps market.

    It will be some time before position limits for single-month and

    all-months-combined can be fully implemented. In the interim, if a

    trader has a position that is above a level of 10 and 2\1/2\;

    percent of futures and options on futures open interest in the 28

    contracts for which the Commission is proposing position limits, I

    have directed staff to collect information, including using special

    call authority when appropriate, to monitor these large positions.

    Staff will brief the Commission and make any appropriate

    recommendations based upon existing authorities for the Commission's

    consideration during its closed surveillance meetings at least

    monthly on what staff finds.

    Collecting this data relating to large traders with positions in

    the futures markets above such levels or points of 10 and 2\1/2\;

    percent would give the Commission a better look into the market and

    help us identify potential concerns. For example, if a trader does

    not have a bona fide hedge exemption, we can look into the details

    of its position and its intentions. It may also give us additional

    information as to how the position limits in the proposed rulemaking

    would affect traders in these markets.

    These levels, or points, are the positions at which CFTC staff

    will brief the Commission under its existing authorities. They would

    not be a substitute for current position limits or accountability

    levels, and they should not be interpreted to be a level that will

    automatically trigger any additional regulatory action.

    Appendix 3--Statement of Commissioner Bart Chilton

    I reluctantly concur in the Commission's approval of publication

    of notice of a proposed rulemaking on position limits for

    derivatives. I support the Commission's issuance of a position

    limits proposal, but I do not support the timing.

    I have said repeatedly that it is of paramount importance to

    adhere to the deadlines imposed by Congress in the Wall Street

    Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010. Position limits is one

    of the rulemakings with an earlier target date. The current proposal

    does not meet the statutory time limits of imposition of limits

    within 180 days from the date of enactment for energy and metal

    commodities and 270 days for agricultural commodities. The agency

    does not have the authority to delay these statutory deadlines.

    At the open Commission meeting of the agency on December 9,

    2010, the Chairman indicated an intent to move forward with two

    proposals on speculative position limits and to move

    ``expeditiously'' to implement spot month limits. This bifurcation

    of spot and single month/aggregate rulemakings was a good attempt to

    meet the January deadline set by Congress. At the meeting on

    December 16, 2010, however, the Commission was presented with a

    single proposed rule, with a 60-day comment period, addressing spot,

    single month, and aggregate limits. Accordingly, it is now clear

    that spot month limits will not be implemented for many months, at

    best, and single month/aggregate limits--and the corresponding new

    bona fide hedging rule--may take more than a year to implement.

    We need to address excessive speculation in these markets now.

    We already have more speculative positions in the commodities

    markets than ever before. There are some who suggest that certain

    commodity prices are currently delinked from supply and demand

    fundamentals, and are being impacted by excessive speculation.

    Should these conditions worsen, I will not hesitate to continue to

    criticize the delay that the Commission's position limits proposed

    rulemaking exacerbates.

    I commend the position point agreement that the Chairman

    publicly directed the staff to undertake. This interim measure will

    give the agency a window into the ``largest of the large'' traders

    in our markets, and is an appropriate provisional effort as we

    transition to include the swaps market into our traditional

    surveillance systems.

    The Commission should have acted so as to implement position

    limits as directed by Congress, pursuant to the statutory deadlines.

    I am disappointed that it failed to do so, and I will continue to

    aggressively advocate for rules that will appropriately address

    excessive speculatio

    .[FR Doc. 2011-1154 Filed 1-25-11; 8:45 am]

    BILLING CODE P

    Last Updated: January 26, 2011



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