Bridging the Week: February 22–26 and 29, 2016 (Position Limits; Short Sales; Canadian Derivatives; Form PR)


An advisory committee of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission recommended scrapping the agency’s proposed rules imposing federal position limits on energy and certain other derivatives. Meanwhile, a broker-dealer was fined US $675,000 by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority for allowing a customer to repeatedly fail to timely cover short sales involving exchange-traded funds. As a result, the following matters are covered in this week’s edition of Bridging the Week:

Briefly:

My View: According to a report this week in the Wall Street Journal (click here to access), CFTC Chairman Timothy Massad rejected the rationale of the EEMAC in recommending to scrap the CFTC’s latest proposed position limits rules –principally that they are not necessary or may hurt liquidity. The newspaper quoted Mr. Massad as saying, “[i]t strikes me a bit like saying you’re against speed limits because they may make you late for work.” However, this comment ignores the existing practice of designated contract markets to enforce strict position limits for energy and other commodity derivatives in the spot month, and maintain accountability levels in other months. Utilizing an accountability level regime permits DCMs to closely monitor overall market activity, but only restrict trading size when they believe it is necessary. In his dissenting view, Mr. Slocum questioned the objectivity of DCMs to establish or enforce position limits' alternatives as they are for-profit enterprises. The CFTC always retains its authority to take disciplinary action against a DCM that it believes it not fulfilling its core requirement to prevent market disruption.

And more briefly:


©2025 Katten Muchin Rosenman LLP
National Law Review, Volume VI, Number 60