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Comment for Proposed Rule 75 FR 3281

  • From: Lydia Lorenz
    Organization(s):

    Comment No: 5603
    Date: 2/26/2010

    Comment Text:

    i0-001
    COMMENT
    CL-05603
    From:
    Sent:
    To:
    Subject:
    Attach:
    Lydia Lorenz
    Friday, February 26, 2010 4:55 PM
    secretary
    Regulation of Retail Forex
    IBFX CFTC Comments 2-26-10.pdf
    Dear Mr. David Stawick, Secretary:
    Attached are comments submitted on behalf of Interbank FX in reference to Regulation of Retail Forex (RIN 3038-AC61).
    Thankyou,
    Lydia Lorenz
    202-842-2345February 26, 20 ! 0
    Mr. David Stawick, Secretary
    C!xmnodity Futures Trading Conm-tission
    1 !55 21
    ~
    Street, N.W.
    Washington, D.C. 20581
    Re: RI.. ~ 3(~38-AC61
    De,u" Mr. Stawick:
    These comments are submitted on behalf of Interbank FX (IBFX). IBFX is an off-
    exchange retail foreign currency broker whose pioneering efforts have created a unique
    foreign exchange (forex) trading environment. Interbank FX has distinguished itself as
    an industry leader with our unique Multibank Liquidity feed, proprietary trading tools
    and service and focus on customer care. We were founded in 2001 by a group of foreign
    exchange trading veterans who wanted to pioneer an alternative method of trading in the
    forex markevplace. Our proprietary technology and distinctive approach to forex trading
    allow our customers to execute directly from a streaming quote feed. [gFX is registered
    with the National Futures Association (NFA) as a futures commission :merchant (FCM)
    and Forex Dealer Member (FDM).
    IBFX believes that sensible regulation, including both self-regulation through the NFA
    and federal oversight through the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), is
    sound public policy and in the interest of our customers and our industry. Our company
    strongly supported the establishment by Congress of a separate regulatory category for
    retail forex dealers, strict capital standards for retail forex firms, and CFTC authority to
    police against fraud and other abusive practices,
    We also support most aspects of the r~ale proposed on January 20, 2010, by the cIq'C
    (Commodity Futures Trading Commission. "Regulation of Off.-Excimnge Ret:ail Foreign
    Exchange Transactions and lntern-~ediea'ies.")
    ~
    Among ~he proposals that we support are
    ~:hose applicable to .--
    Registration with the Ct-q'C a~d NFA;
    Disclosure of relevant information to customers;
    Record-keeping;
    Fh~ancia.1 reporting; a~d
    Mi~fimum capital
    ~ Federal Register
    Vol, 75, No, 12, ppo 32824330
    3165 E Mi rock r.)- Ste 200
    *
    Salt Lake .3itv, UT 84121
    *
    801 93?.6800 ~, 866.468 3739
    *
    2i2 884 r609Mr. David Stawick
    February 26~ 2(110
    Page 2
    IBFX strongly opposes one aspect of the proposed rule: a 10:1 limit on leverage that may
    be offered to customers, i.e., a requirement that customers post a security deposit in cash
    or other specified financial instruments equal to 10% of the notional value of a forex
    transaction. We believe that this proposal .--
    Is unnecessary to p:'otecl fetal1 investora because this goal is already aci~ieved
    throagh rigorous capital requirements that will prevent fly-by-night operations
    :from defrauding investors;
    Will make retail forex trading in the United States uncompetitive and hence drive
    retail business either offshore to venues that permit higher leverage, or to trading
    venues not subject to the leverage requirement, including futures exchanges and
    potentially hanks or other financial intermediaries not regulated by the CFTC;
    Runs counter to the considered judgment of the NFA, which late last year began
    to apply a 100:1 leverage limit, a level arrived at through an analysis of the
    leverage requirements of U.S. futures exchanges and comparable developed-
    country financial regulators;
    Is inconsistent with the intent of Congress, which could have chosen to ban retail
    forex trading but chose instead to regulate it. a decision that presupposes that
    Congress intended that the industry could continue to exist: and
    Is inconsistent with the Commodity Exchange Act's reqmrement
    2
    that the CFTC
    "take the least anticompetitive means of achieving the objectives oF' the Act. in
    that the proposed rule unfairly and unjustifiably favors on-exchange forex trading
    even though customers in that trading venue can lose more than their initial
    investment while retail forex customers cannot.
    The Propased Limitation o,~ Leverage is Un~e~:essary
    First, the leverage limitation is unnecessary to achieve customer protection. As Congress
    recognized in the CFTC Reauthorization Act of 2008,
    ~
    longstanding retail forex fraud
    problems were overwhelmingly centered on poorly-capitalized boiler-rooms that operated
    outside CFTC scrutiny because of the legal uncertainty as to whether they were subject to
    the Commodity Exchange Act (the Act). Congress resolved this problem by giving the
    CFTC clear authority over retail forex transactions regardless of whether various courts
    considered them to be futures contracts or not; and by laying out, in the statute, specific
    capital requirements for retail forex dealers. The NFA. and now the CFTC in its
    proposed rule, have actually strengthened the capital requirements above the statutory
    m~nimums by requiting additional capital when a firm's trading volume exceeds a certain
    threshold.
    ~ 7 U.S.C. § 19(b).
    ~ P.L 110-2~6, i22 Star. 2189~CMr, L)avid Stawick
    February 26, 2010
    Page 3
    Relatedly, the leverage limitation is also unnecessary to avoid systemic financial risk.
    Congress and regulators alike consider that excessive leverage contributed to the
    financial meltdown of 2008. However, this leverage occurred in the context of
    institutional derivatives markets where many trillions of dollars in notional value changed
    hands daily. The leverage also involved large financial institutions either explicitly or
    implicitly backed up by the taxpayers, or otherwise considered "too big to fail." By
    contrast, the retail forex markets involve customers who, by definition, are retail rather
    than institutional investors, and no retail forex firm is large enough that anyone would
    suggest the possibility of a taxpayer bailout. Indeed, the entire U.S. retail forex market is
    estimated at $800 million in customer assets, and a little over $700 million in adjusted net
    capital for the industry itself. These are not sums that pose any systemic risk in our
    multi-trillion-dollar economy. (It might also be noted that tbrex instruments generally
    were not among those that were implicated in the meltdown; rather, derivatives and other
    instruments based on real estate and credit risk were most prominent in the debacle of
    2007 and 2008.)
    The Proposed Leverage Limits Will Make the U,S~ Retail Forex Industry
    Uncompetitive
    T~,day, retai! investors have a wider range of tradiag o-ppormni~:~es ~haa ever before,
    ability of customers to trade on a vmiety of platfo~ns over ~;~e tmeme~ means tlt~at U.S.
    regt~la~ors must b~ miad~u] o~' how comparable tra~saciion~ in similar developed-,cou~m:y
    jarisdictio~s are regt~lated. C~,smmers can and will move their b~siness e~sewhere if
    requirements to trade in the U.S. ~ue perceived as overly onerous~
    Now, U.S. retail forex fi~vns provide a range of leverage to customers, but under NFA
    rules 100:1 is the maximum allowed, and some firms offer this ievel. For the customer of
    such a firm engaging in a forex transaction with a value of $5,000, the CFTC' s proposed
    rule means that instead of posting a security deposit of $50, the customer must post $500.
    One can easily understand that a change of this magnitude will cause investors to look for
    alternatives. We believe that customer comments already publicly filed with the CFTC
    make tNs clear,
    It i~ no.: necessary to hyt~oi:hesize new trading venues i~. m~dition~d haven,s for offsihore
    ba~ki~g ~r sim:i~ar ~ansact~oas. instead, investors need only locate firms operating i~ the
    United Kingdom, w[~ere 200:1 ~everagc is typical. Prac~:ices h~ At~st~alia, Fra~ce and
    Ge~any are simitar~
    Thus, the regulators of these developed-country markets are content for customers to
    enter into forex transactions with leverage twice that now permitted by the NFA, and
    20
    times
    what would be allowed under the proposed rule, The NFA's leverage limitation
    already constrains U.S. firms to some degree, but the CFTC's proposed rule would
    simply make it untenable to conduct retail forex business in the United States.M~. David Stawick
    February 26, 2010
    Page 4
    Business would necessarily :m:ig~ate offshore, ~.o non-.CFTC.-regulaed entities such as
    ~mtior..ai banks, or to trading ot~ designated contract me~'kets (futm'es exchau.ges), These
    al'ter:~ative tra~.i.~g venues are available and, excep~ fbr fi~mres excha~ges, carmot be
    regulated by the CIq?C. Thus, it is likely that ~he p.."oposed rule will have the ironic effect
    of leaving the CFTC with less~ not more, regulatory control over retail forex trading.
    The Propos~d Rule is Inco~sis{em: wi~:h N1;7~, Rules
    The CFTC.? certainly is not constrained to abide by decisions made by the NFAo
    Nevertheless, since the NFA only recently went through a rulemaking process on the very
    subject of retail forex leverage, and since the CFTC accepted the resulting NFA rules, it
    is quite strange that the CFTC largely ignored the NFA' s decision and logic in crafting its
    proposed rule.
    The NFA submitted its leverage requirements to the CFTC on February 23, 2009. i~
    discussing its proposals, the NFA stated that it was revising its previous requirement for a
    2% security deposit for major currencies down to 1%, in part because of positive
    experience from permitting firms to offer 1% on a temporary basis; in part becanse of the
    contemporaneous introduction of higher capital requirements for retail forex firms; and in
    part because unlike futures exchanges, retail forex firms "use systems that liquidate
    customer positions before they reach a negative balance ...,,4
    This last poi~t bears out the wisdom of the NFA's approach. The self-regulatory agency
    recognized that there :is a fundamental difference between security deposits in retail forex
    trading a~d margins in on-exchange futures trading, even though both have some features
    and purposes in common. A retail forex customer cannot normally lose more than his or
    her initial investment because his or her account will be liquidated before its value
    reaches zero. By contrast, margin calls in futures trading make it quite possible (and
    even common) for an investor in futures contracts to lose more than his or her initial
    h, vestment. Hence, the same degree of leverage poses less risk to an individual customer
    trading fermi fore.x than to the same customer trading forex futures on an exchange.
    The Proposed Leverage Limitations are Contrary to the Intent of Congress
    The legislation passed by Ccmg!'e~;a in 2008 whici~ is ti~e basis of CFTC's present
    rulemaking
    ~
    contains not one word abot~.t iimiti~g leverage. To our knowledg< nothing
    in the legislative history, hearing records or cow,tee reports expticit[y discusses the
    prospect of limits on leverage. Thas, it is difficult to a~gue that in imposing a limitation
    on leverage that will unquestio~mbly drive the re~ail ~Brex industry out ot the United
    States, the C~'I-C is aimpiy fo!towi~g the will of Cong~vss,
    ~ Na*iona! Futures Association: Ferex Securit:,' Deposits - Proposed Amer~dments to N~aA Fi,~at~ciai
    Requirements Section i 2 a~tt Interpretive Note Regarding Fore>: Transat:ti~ms. Con:e~pondence from NFA
    to CIvl'C, Feb. 23~ 2.009.
    s P.L. it0. 2~6,
    ~oc. cir.Mr,
    David Stawick
    February 26, 2010
    Page 5
    A limit
    o~
    leverage, in and of kseif,
    nmy
    be within :he CFIIC's authorits< But in taking
    an action ttm~ is
    all
    hat guarameed m put U.S. :'e~:Nl forex firms out of business - and
    their empbyees on the unemployment lines - the CFTC is clearly acting against lhe
    inient of Congress,
    The logic is simple. If Congress had wanted to ban this entire industry, it could have
    done so by making all retail forex transactions illegal. That is not what Congress did.
    Instead, Congress made all retail forex transactions
    subject to regulation.
    If Congress
    feels that an industry needs to be regulated - a judgment with which, as already stated,
    IBFX fully agrees - then Congress is necessarily also saying that it is satisfied for that
    industry to exist. No public purpose is served in regulating a non-existent industry.
    All the purposes of regulation become harder to achieve - if not impossible - once an
    industry has been driven outside U.S. borders. The CFTC can offer little more than
    words to investors defrauded by firms operating outside the United States, Capital
    reqairements cannot be enforced against firms not subject to U.S. laws. Thus, the CFTC
    is proposing to destroy an industry and eliminate the jobs associated with it, and in the
    process will fail to achieve what Congress told the cormnission to do in the first place.
    The Leverage Limitations Would Be AntioC~mpetitive
    The most likely outcome of :he <.F I C ~. proposed limits on leverage would be to sm~d
    existing business offshore~ However~ another possible outcome is ~hat a portion of the
    business wili migrate to designated comract markets in the Uaited Siateso
    To the extent that the CFTC foresees or desires this outcome, the coam3issio,~ should feel
    obliged to defe:~d this proposed rule in the co:~text of Sec~ 15(b) of the Ac<
    6
    which
    requires the least anti-.competitive means of achieving a given objective to be chosen.
    The CI~FC's proposed role wouN certainly enh~mce the competitive position of futures
    exchanges at the expense of retail lk)rex dealers.
    Congress gave no evidence of such a~ anti-competitive intent in legislating Ct-q'C%
    am:hoplty over ~etail forex ~radinm But m~der the CF FC s proposal, famres exchanges
    ~uld offer ~us~omer le~ erage perhaps twice as high as ~he levels permitted to retail
    fore~ customers (t:sing the average exchange ma@ns ciied by NFA in ks rule
    submission). This is anquestionabiy a compe~qti~ ~. ad ~antag~.. Yet ti~e CFTC has not
    exp[ai~md why it desires to give ['umres exchanges a competiiive advantage over retail
    forex dealers, if thai: is i~deed the Ct~TC's wish- and if it is no~, the commission should
    reconsider the proposal in light of the competitive consequences.Mr. David Stawick
    Fcbm~y 26, 2010
    Page 6
    The Solution is Regulation, Not Prohibition
    iMost of the CF'TC's p:roposed ..',tile is sou~d. Indeed, these pa~s of the. rule presuppose
    tlaat the~e will be a U.S. re~:ail forex hadm~try to be reg~la~ed. U~brtm~ately, if the
    leverage limitations ~e adopted~ no sach industry is llkely to exist, ix~stead, mes~ if ~ot
    al~ of ~e .~e~ail forex business wiil be dfive~i over'seas a~td the ~obs ilow ~ssocia~ed with
    the retail %rex industry will follow. We do not believe that is flae C~C's intent. We are
    certain it was not Congress's intern. Therefore, we implore the commission to reconsider
    tNs ill-advised leverage li~fitatio~ az~d adopt a more se~tsible alter~iative tha~: pemfits the
    total.1 ~brex industry to rema{n vtaNe-- and regt~iated --- it~ the United States.
    ~I'odd Crosland, President