Bridging the Week: September 21 to 25 and 28, 2015 (Aggregation, Cybersecurity, Wash Sales, Fund Redemptions, IB Records, CTA Registration)


CFTC Revises Aggregation Proposal Related to Position Limits

The Commodity Futures Trading Commission revised its November 2013 proposal related to the aggregation of accounts in connection with its speculative position limits requirements.

Under its earlier proposal, the Commission would have required any entity owning more than 50 percent of another entity formally to apply to the Commission for approval to disaggregate positions of the other entity to the extent it may have qualified for relief.

Under the Commission’s new proposal, any qualified entity owning 10 percent or more of another entity up to 100 percent may file a notice of disaggregation, which would be effective upon submission. The notice would be required to include a description of the relevant conditions that warrant disaggregation and a certification by a senior officer that the conditions have been met.

In addition, under its earlier proposed aggregation rules the CFTC would have disallowed disaggregation for an owned entity if the entity was required to be and was consolidated in the financial statement of its ultimate owner. This provision has been eliminated in the new proposal because the CFTC found “merit” in arguments that “ownership of 50 percent interest in an entity (and the related consolidation of financial statements) may not mean that the owner actually controls day-to-day trading decisions of the owned entity.”

Generally, under the CFTC’s current aggregation rules, a person must combine all positions where it controls the trading decisions with all positions where the person has a 10 percent or more ownership interest in an account or position, as well as the positions of two or more persons acting according to an express or implied agreement. (Click here to access the CFTC’s current aggregation requirements – CFTC Regulation 150.4.) There are currently a number of potential exemptions to the CFTC aggregation requirements, including those pertaining to eligible entities with so-called independent account controllers; ownership interests of limited partners in pooled accounts; discretionary accounts; and customer trading programs of futures commission merchants.

In its November 2013 proposal, the Commission provided for persons meeting certain requirements to disaggregate positions of separately organized entities solely where the person’s ownership interest was between 10 and 50 percent. This ability would have been subject to a notice filing. 

Under the new revised proposal, this capability is expanded to persons owning between 10 and 100 percent of another entity. Aggregation is still the “default requirement,” says the CFTC, unless a person (including any account such person must aggregate):

The CFTC will maintain its other exemptions from its aggregation rules for eligible entities under its revised proposal.

Commissioner J. Christopher Giancarlo voted to approve the revised aggregation rule proposal along with CFTC Chairman Timothy Massad and Commissioner Sharon Bowen. However, Mr. Giancarlo expressed concern that the Commission’s proposed revised rule prohibited disaggregation where an owner and subsidiary entity has risk management systems that permitted the sharing of trades or trading strategies. According to Mr. Giancarlo,

[this] proposed rule may stymie critical risk-mitigation efforts. Owners and their affiliates may need to share information regarding trades or trading strategy to verify compliance with applicable credit limits as well as restrictions and collateral requirements for inter-affiliate transactions, among other risk-management and compliance related objectives.

Comments will be accepted by the CFTC on its revised aggregation rule proposals for 45 days after publication in the Federal Register

Briefly:

Compliance Weeds: Expectations of regulators of registrants in both the securities and futures industry has been increasing during the past year regarding what cybersecurity protections should be in place to protect customer records and information. At the beginning of 2015, the SEC said it would focus on cybersecurity compliance and controls among its 2015 examination priorities for broker-dealers and investment advisers.  Just recently, on September 15, 2015, the SEC provided specific guidance on what it would look at in connection with these reviews. The SEC said it would focus on registrants’ governance and risk assessment related to cybersecurity; access rights and controls; data loss prevention; vendor management; training; and incident response. (Click here for further details) Also at the beginning of 2015, the Financial Industry Regulatory published a report identifying findings from its 2014 targeted examination of firms related to their cybersecurity practices and recommended practices broker-dealers should implement to minimize the impact of cybersecurity threats. Moreover, last month, the National Futures Association submitted to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission for its approval a proposed Interpretive Notice requiring certain NFA members to maintain formal, written information systems security programs. Although the NFA made clear that its “policy is not to establish specific technology requirements,” it will require all relevant members to have supervisory procedures that are “reasonably designed to diligently supervise the risks of unauthorized access to or attack of their information technology systems, and to respond appropriately should unauthorized access or attack occur.” (Click here for further details) Practically, any cyber breach that compromises customer personal information could leave an SEC or CFTC registrant vulnerable to an enforcement action if it had not previously adopted a written policy and procedure designed to minimize the threat of a cyber-attack and followed such procedure – whether or not an express requirement currently exists.

Compliance Weeds: This matter is an example of why the greatest threat of cyber-attacks is from inside employees and consultants. Firms’ cybersecurity policies and procedures should address internal threats.

Compliance Weeds: Transfers of positions between non-independently controlled accounts of the same beneficial owner should be accomplished using the transfer rules of the relevant exchange, not through non-competitive trades, including exchange for related position transactions. (Click here for applicable CME rule (853), and here for applicable ICE Futures U.S. rule (4.11).)

My View: Just last week I noted that some would question why the CFTC would bring an enforcement action where an exchange had brought a materially identical disciplinary action previously. In the relevant case involving Robert McMahon, I concluded there likely was arguable justification for the CFTC's "me too" action in light of the fact the allegations involved fraud, and the relevant exchange could not ban the individual from trading on all exchanges but solely its own.  This case is different. Here the charges involve a few incidents of a discrete type of trade practice offense  wash sales  and there is no allegation of fraud or any widespread market offense, such as manipulation. As a result, even though the CME Group previously charged only offenses that occurred on its exchange (and not on the Kansas City Board of Trade), the exchange-action carried an appropriate sanction and conveyed an appropriate message. The CFTC's "me too" action here appears a misuse of scarce resources.

And more briefly:


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National Law Review, Volume V, Number 278