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Comment for Proposed Rule 75 FR 3281

  • From: Sara Steindamm
    Organization(s):

    Comment No: 2467
    Date: 1/22/2010

    Comment Text:

    i0-001
    COMMENT
    CL-02467
    From:
    Sent:
    To:
    Subject:
    SARA STE1NDAMM
    Friday, January 22, 2010 6:03 AM
    secretary
    Regulation of Retail Forex
    Dear Secretary Stawick,
    By now you have no doubt been inundated with e-mails pointing out the reasons why liming leverage of retail forex to 10:1
    would not accomplish the CFTC's said goals of improving trader safety. I do agree with these views very strongly, however
    rather than repeat what was already said, I would like instead to touch upon some of the other parts of CFTC proposal RIN
    3038-AC61, better known as "Regulation of Off-Exchange Retail Foreign Exchange Transactions and Intermediaries" which
    are perhaps more subtle, but whose long-term unintended effects could be just as damaging both to the industry, and to the
    very safety of the very traders you are seeking to protect.
    While regulating intermediaries may at first seem like a good idea, my feeling is that there is NO reason for IBs to be
    regulated, capitalized, or audited since we do not handle or have access to client funds. It is also essentially double-
    regulation, since the brokers we work with are already registered, and we review each web page and each piece of marketing
    material quite closely with their legal and compliance departments in order to maintain a proper and professional standard.
    As we are paid by the broker a commission on the clients' trading, our interests are aligned with those of the client - to do
    everything we can to ensure their success. Also, please do not forget that many of us are already being regulated in our home
    countries as well.
    If an IB ever goes bankrupt (which keep in mind is rare since our income does not derive from market exposure), how would
    it affect their clients? The answer is not at all. Their money is with the broker, and the broker's bank - we do not have any
    access to it, nor do we need to. So why the capitalization requirements? $40K is not a lot of money, but I fail to see why I
    must be forced to keep it in US Dollars (which have been declining in value), or even in a US bank (which have been failing
    at an alarming rate as of late). What if based upon my professional judgment and understanding of current market conditions
    I prefer to keep my capitalization in gold bars at a private, undisclosed location? Is not choosing what I do with my money
    not within my rights?
    And how about the audits? Will the CFTC provide (and pay) their own auditors, or is this yet another expense and burden
    (much like the required membership itself) which we must be forced bear? And why must we open our books to a foreign
    organization? We small companies with limited staff and resources would much rather put our time and attention to
    educating our clients for safer trading, and providing them with value-added (free) services in order to increase their chances
    of success as much as possible. I view us not as intermediaries, but as advocates on the client's behalf - and I believe we
    fulfill a very necessary and needed role. Our clients certainly believe so. Brokers have certainly commended us, for in return
    they get users who know how to trade, who consume less support resources, and whose accounts have staying power. And
    isn't the safety of traders what we are both after?
    So, please, require us to submit all marketing materials for review if you wish - we have no problem with it because we want
    them to be accurate, informative, and helpful just as you do. But to force a RFED to "guarantee" their IB not only goes
    against the core of free market principles (asking one firm to be responsible for another), but it virtually guarantees that no
    broker will. Also, please do not forget, that it is precisely our independence form a broker, which provides the most objective
    benefit to a client. And while there is no denying that the added membership revenue must be a significant motivation for
    you, please consider that we currently have clients in 43 different countries - it is madness to expect small companies like
    ours (we are not Lehman Brothers with an entire floor of lawyers dedicated to compliance - nor did all that compliance really
    help them in the end) to be regulated by 43 different regulators. Yet that is essentially what your precedent is asking us to do
    - join every organization in every country where we might have a client. In today's online world, we have clients from
    everywhere, and we have no way control who sees our site and who not.
    Most of the US clients we speak with are already fed up with the NFA due to all the unfair and unreasonable trading
    restrictions recently put in place by them (regulation is meant to keep financial institutions in line and markets fair, not to tell
    investors how they can or cannot trade). At a time of economic recovery it seems absurd to send good American jobs and
    investment capital offshore, which is obviously what will result when conditions become no longer favorable for traders at
    home. And once we start telling them we can no longer do business with them nor provide support, I suspect (hope?) the
    public outcry will only grow louder. For it is far easier for us to simply to focus on other markets, than to comply withi0-001
    COMMENT
    CL-02467
    unreasonable and unfairly burdensome regulations. The CFTC might take its example from the UK's FSA, ~vhich does not
    do "one size fits all" regulation, but rather regulates each entity as is appropriate to their business model and the activities
    they conduct.
    In closing, I would like to remind you that the Regulatory Flexibility Act ("RFA") of 1997 requires that agencies, in
    proposing rules, consider the impact of those rules on small businesses. Have you? How about the impact of those small
    business no longer existing, and no longer providing the value-added services they have developed to educate traders and to
    help keep them safe?
    Thank you for your time and consideration,
    Sara Steindam
    Germany
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