Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) Chairman J Christopher Giancarlo has released a white paper titled ‘Cross-Border Swaps Regulation Version 2.0: A Risk-Based Approach with Deference to Comparable Non-US Regulation.’
Based on the principles set forth in this white paper, Giancarlo (pictured), intends to direct the CFTC staff to put forth new rule proposals to address a range of cross-border issues in swaps reform.
“I have been a constant supporter of the swaps market reforms passed by the US Congress in Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010 and the commitments made by the G20 leaders in Pittsburgh in 2009,” says Giancarlo. “Those are clearing standardised swaps through central counterparties, reporting swaps to trade repositories, and trading standardised swaps on regulated trading platforms. However, I have long said that I hold reservations about the CFTC’s current approach to applying its swaps rules to cross-border activities.”
This paper identifies a number of adverse consequences of the CFTC’s cross-border approach, including the following:
• It is expressed in “guidance” rather than formal regulation subject to the Administrative Procedure Act.
• It is over-expansive, unduly complex, and operationally impractical, increasing transaction costs and reducing economic growth and opportunity.
• It relies on a substituted compliance regime that encourages a somewhat arbitrary, rule-by-rule comparison of CFTC and non-US rules under which a transaction or entity may be subject to a patchwork of CFTC and non-US regulations.
• It shows insufficient deference to non-US regulators that have adopted comparable G20 swaps reforms and is inconsistent with the CFTC’s longstanding approach of showing comity to competent non-US regulators in the regulation of futures.
The white paper recommends improvements to the CFTC’s cross-border approach that are supportive of the G20 swaps reforms and aligned to Congressional intent, and that better balance systemic risk mitigation with healthy swaps market activity in support of broad-based economic growth. Among other things, the Chairman recommends the following changes to the CFTC’s cross-border approach:
• Non-US CCPs – Expand the use of the CFTC’s exemptive authority for non-US CCPs that are subject to comparable regulation in their home country and do not pose substantial risk to the US financial system, permitting them to provide clearing services to US customers indirectly through non-US clearing members that are not registered with the CFTC.
• Non-US Trading Venues – End the current bifurcation of the global swaps markets into separate US person and non-US person marketplaces by exempting non-US trading venues in regulatory jurisdictions that have adopted comparable G20 swaps reforms from having to register with the CFTC as swap execution facilities, thereby permitting such jurisdictions to each function as a unified marketplace, under one set of comparable trading rules and under one competent regulator.
• Non-US Swap Dealers – Require registration of non-US swap dealers whose swap dealing activity poses a “direct and significant” risk to the US financial system; take into account situations where the risk to the US financial system is otherwise addressed, such as swap transactions with registered swap dealers that are conducted outside the United States; and show appropriate deference to non-US regulatory regimes that have comparable requirements for entities engaged in swap dealing activity.
• Clearing and Trade Execution Requirements – Adopt an approach that permits non-US persons to rely on substituted compliance with respect to the swap clearing and trade execution requirements in Comparable Jurisdictions, and that applies those requirements in Non-Comparable Jurisdictions if they have a “direct and significant” effect on the United States.
• ANE Transactions – Take a territorial approach to US swaps trading activity, including trades that are “arranged, negotiated, or executed” within the United States by personnel or agents of such non-US persons. Non-incidental swaps trading activity in the United States should be subject to US swaps trading rules. Such an approach addresses the current fragmentation of US swaps markets, with some activity subject to CFTC rules and some activity not subject to CFTC rules. This approach is consistent with the principle – one unified marketplace, under one set of comparable trading rules and under one competent regulator.
These proposals will be presented to the full Commission for thoughtful input and bipartisan consideration and adoption. The resulting rule-makings would replace the cross-border guidance issued by the CFTC in 2013 and the cross-border rules proposed by the CFTC in 2016, as well as address certain positions taken in CFTC staff advisories and no-action letters.