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Comment for Proposed Rule 75 FR 3281

  • From: J B Jackson
    Organization(s):

    Comment No: 3594
    Date: 1/24/2010

    Comment Text:

    i0-001
    COMMENT
    CL-03594
    From:
    Sent:
    To:
    Subject:
    J.Barrington Jackson
    Sunday, January 24, 2010 6:47 PM
    secretary
    Regulation of Retail Forex
    Re: RIN 3038-AC61
    Greetings,
    This letter is written in opposition to the proposed regulation requiring security deposits
    sufficient to reduce the leverage in retail forex transactions to 10:1. The leverage should be
    retained as 100:1 for major currencies and 25:1 on non-major currencies.
    I am a retail trader in forex.
    Retail traders do not need the "protection" offered by the proposed regulations for the
    following reasons:
    1. The intent behind these transactions are speculative, and the retail trader understands that
    only risk capital, money that the trader can afford to lose, is to be used in such transactions.
    Increasing the security deposit is not rationally related to the objective of protecting vulnerable
    populations from fraudulent marketing practices, since higher net worth doesn't mean greater
    sophistication.
    2. The exposure to loss beyond the amount placed in the forex account is minimal to nil. For
    practical purposes collecting such losses from the customer thru legal process costs more
    than the amount owed, and in any event modern electronic trading and high forex liquidity
    allows for swift position liquidation prior to the creation of a negative account balance. Given
    the dealer's own self interest to avoid customer negative account balances, the electronic
    nature of the trading, and the high liquidity in major currencies, leverage higher than 10:1 can
    be easily dealer managed to avoid loss in excess of the account balance. Access to
    currencies with lower liquidity can be shut off if necessary.
    3. I note that previous regulation with respect to stop loss orders has actually made it more
    difficult for the US based trader to manage risk of loss. Where was the Commission's concern
    for customer losses then?
    4. Counterparty risk is not a risk that would be alleviated by increasing the security deposit
    requirements. Counterparty risk is the credit risk of the counterparty, and is addressed
    primarily by the capital requirements required of the dealer. Practically speaking, the dealers
    often do not even hedge their retail counterparty exposure since at any given time most of the
    retail open positions end up on the wrong side of the market. To suggest that the proposed
    reduced leverage alleviates counterparty risk is simply a fabrication.
    5. Requiring additional capital in the customer account in order to cover customer funds in the
    case of failure of the dealer is nonsensical. The additional capital requirement would only
    mean that should liquidation occur, the customer will have more in the account to
    lose. Requiring a liquidation risk premium, the additional funds required because of thei0-001
    COMMENT
    CL-03594
    reduced leverage, simply creates a tax on the capital transaction, and makes United States
    based accounts less competitive with similar accounts in foreign countries.
    6. What "current industry practices" did the Commission consider? Is the Commission more
    concerned with protecting currency futures contracts and other products that compete with
    the forex market? Price discovery of the exchange rate between two currencies used in
    worldwide trade is much more efficient and transparent than the Chicago proprietary futures
    products which only approximate a basket of exchange rates and which trade in a smaller
    market; and by definition a smaller market is more susceptible to price manipulation.
    Generally we are at the "after the credit bust" point in the business cycle where regulators are
    called upon to prevent the credit abuses of the immediate past. The danger is always over
    regulation and mistargeted regulation. Capital is attracted to the United States because of a
    sound economy and the safety provided in part by regulation. The U. S. economy is however
    based upon incentives to put capital at risk. Risk capital is the mother of invention. And
    speculators provide a counterparty to business transactions that lower the cost of doing
    business. But mistargeted regulation creates disincentives to transact business and pushes
    capital elsewhere.
    The fact is that the world no longer needs the blessing of US regulators for capital
    transactions such as Forex. Witness the US attempts to regulate internet gambling and other
    moral legislation. The result has been that most of the world's internet traffic no longer passes
    through US based internet hubs. Protectionist measures are invariably futile -- this proposed
    reduced leverage will not protect Chicago's currency futures contracts. Those contracts will
    have to be redesigned to incorporate forex pricing and marketed based upon their ability to
    hedge to a specific future date, required for business management of currency risk.
    Innovate, not regulate.
    Respectfully subm itted,
    J. Barrington Jackson
    New York, United States