CFTC Approves Final Rule on Margin Adequacy, Treatment of Separate Accounts of a Customer by Futures Commission Merchants
WASHINGTON, D. C. — The Commodity Futures Trading Commission today
announced a final rule to implement requirements for futures
commission merchants related to margin adequacy and the treatment of
separate accounts of a customer. The rule finalizes the Commission’s
proposal, published in the Federal Register in March, to codify the
no-action position in CFTC staff letter 19-17 regarding separate
account treatment.
That staff letter, which was supplemented
and extended by CFTC Staff Letters 20-28, 21-29, 22-11, 23-13, and
24-07, was jointly issued by the Division of Clearing and Risk and the
Division of Swap Dealer and Intermediary Oversight (now Market
Participants Division) on July 10, 2019. Letter 19-17 included a DCR
staff no-action position stating DCR would not recommend an
enforcement action if a derivatives clearing organization permits an
FCM clearing member to treat the separate accounts of a customer as
accounts of separate entities for purposes of CFTC Regulation 39.
13(g)(8)(iii), so long as the clearing member’s internal controls and
procedures require it to, and it in fact does comply with certain
conditions.
In April 2023, the Commission published in the
Federal Register its first proposal to codify the no-action position
of Letter 19-17. In this first proposal, the Commission proposed to
codify the no-action position of Letter 19-17 under its Part 39 DCO
regulations, applicable to DCOs, and to their clearing FCMs through
the operation of DCO rules. In light of comments received, the
Commission withdrew the first proposal, and instead proposed
requirements for separate account treatment in Part 1, directly
applicable to FCMs.
The final rule adopted Regulation 1. 44,
which will apply to all FCMs, with respect to their customers, a
margin adequacy requirement like the one applicable to DCOs in
Regulation 39. 13(g)(8)(iii). Regulation 1. 44 will also permit FCMs,
whether clearing or non-clearing, to treat the separate accounts of a
single customer as accounts of separate entities for purposes of the
new margin adequacy requirement, and will set forth risk-mitigating
requirements, based on the no-action conditions in Letter 19-17 and
similar proposed requirements in the Commission’s proposals, with
which such FCMs must comply in applying separate account treatment.
The final rule also amends Regulations 1. 3, 1. 17, 1. 20, 1.
32, 1. 58, 1. 73, 22. 2, 30. 2, 30. 7, and 39. 13 to facilitate
implementation of Regulation 1. 44 and to correct certain
inconsistencies identified in the Commission’s existing regulations.
The final rule makes modifications in light of comments
received, including with respect to:
Proposed requirements
related to the treatment of separate accounts of an FCM customer for
purposes of certain capital treatment requirements under Regulation 1.
17.
Proposed definitions of certain terms in Regulation 1.
44.
Proposed requirements related to a separate account
meeting the “one business day margin call” standard, concerning
meeting margin calls during foreign banking holidays and untimely
payment of margin due to certain administrative errors or operational
constraints.
A proposed requirement related to the consistent
application of separate account treatment.
The compliance date
for FCMs that are members of a DCO as of the date of publication of
the final rule in the Federal Register is 180 days after such date of
publication, while the compliance date for all other FCMs is 365 days
after such date of publication.