98-31494. Chicago Board of Trade: Proposed Amendments to the Wheat, Oats, and Soybean Futures Contracts Modifying Certain Delivery Specifications of the Wheat Futures Contract, Amending Rules Governing Load Out Against Warehouse Receipts for Wheat ...  

  • [Federal Register Volume 63, Number 227 (Wednesday, November 25, 1998)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 65175-65177]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 98-31494]
    
    
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    COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION
    
    
    Chicago Board of Trade: Proposed Amendments to the Wheat, Oats, 
    and Soybean Futures Contracts Modifying Certain Delivery Specifications 
    of the Wheat Futures Contract, Amending Rules Governing Load Out 
    Against Warehouse Receipts for Wheat and Oats and Shipping Certificates 
    for Corn and Soybeans, and Revising the Last Trading and Delivery Days 
    for the Oats and Wheat Futures Contracts
    
    AGENCY: Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
    
    ACTION: Notice of proposed contract market rule change.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Chicago Board of Trade (CBT or Exchange) has submitted 
    proposed amendments to its wheat futures contract which will modify the 
    locational price differentials for delivery at Toledo and St. Louis, 
    change the quality price differentials for U.S. No. 1 and U.S. No. 2 
    grade northern spring wheat, and reduce the speculative position limits 
    for the March and May contract months during the last five trading 
    days. In additional, the Exchange is proposing amendments that will 
    modify the load-out provisions for the wheat, corn, oats and soybean 
    futures contracts and which will change the last trading day and the 
    last delivery day for all contract months for the wheat and oats 
    futures contracts. The Commission has determined to request pubic 
    comment on the proposed amendments based upon its finding that the 
    proposed amendments are of major economic significance within the 
    meaning of section 5a(a)(12) of the Commodity Exchange Act (Act) and 
    that their publication is in the public interest and will assist the 
    Commission in considering the views of interested persons.
    
    DATES: Comments must be received on or before December 28, 1998.
    
    ADDRESSES: Interested persons should submit their views and comments to 
    Jean A. Webb, Secretary, Commodity Futures Trading Commission, Three 
    Lafayette Centre, 1155 21st Street, NW, Washington, DC 20581. In 
    addition, comments may be sent by facsimile transmission to facsimile 
    number (202) 418-5521 or by electronic mail to secretary@cftc.gov. 
    Reference should be made to the CBT grain futures contracts' delivery 
    specification proposals.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, CONTACT: Please contact Fred Linse of the 
    Division of Economic Analysis, Commodity Futures Trading Commission, 
    Three Lafayette Centre, 1155 21st Street, NW, Washington, DC 20581, 
    telephone (202) 418-5273, facsimile number (202) 418-5527, or 
    electronically at flinse@cftc.gov.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Commodity Futures Trading Commission 
    (Commission), by letter dated December 19, 1996, issued a request to 
    the Chicago Board of Trade (CBT) to undertake a study of the delivery 
    specifications of its wheat futures contract and to submit its findings 
    to the Commission by April 18, 1997, 120 days from the date of the 
    Commission's request (see 61 FR 67998 (December 26, 1996)).\1\ The CBT 
    responded to the Commission's request by letter dated April 18, 1997, 
    providing a status report to the Commission of its actions.\2\ The 
    Commission on July 8, 1997, solicited public comment on the delivery 
    specifications of the CBT's wheat futures contract (62 FR 36499) to 
    assist it in considering the concerns identified in the Commission's 
    December 19, 1996 notification. The CBT on October 21, 1998, submitted 
    to the Commission for its review proposed amendments to its wheat 
    futures contract.
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        \1\ The request was made in conjunction with the Commission's 
    notification to the CBT under Section 5a(a)(10) of the Act, 7 U.S.C. 
    Sec. 7a(a)(10), that the delivery terms of the CBT corn and soybean 
    futures contracts no longer accomplish the statutory objectives of 
    ``permit[ting] the delivery of any commodity . . . at such point or 
    points and at such quality and locational price differentials as 
    will tend to prevent or diminish price manipulation, market 
    congestion, or the abnormal movement of such commodity in interstate 
    commerce.'' This request was based on the continuing diminution of 
    the role of terminal markets in the cash market for grain, the 
    increasing shift of the locus of the main channels of commodity 
    flows away from the delivery points on the grain contracts, 
    particularly the par delivery point of Chicago, and the resulting 
    precipitous drop in regular warehouse storage capacity at the 
    Chicago delivery point. For corn and soybeans, the Commission on 
    November 7, 1997, issued an Order changing and supplementing under 
    Section 5a(a)(10) of the Act, 7 U.S.C. 7a(a)(10), the delivery terms 
    of those futures contracts (62 FR 60831 (November 13, 1997)), and, 
    on May 7, 1998, approved further changes to the corn and soybeans 
    futures contracts' delivery terms (63 FR 26575 (May 13, 1998)).
        \2\ The CBT reported that, although a Task Force appointed by 
    the CBT Board of Directors had recommended certain changes to the 
    delivery terms of the wheat futures contract, the Board had decided 
    to refrain from acting on those recommendations at that time and 
    determined instead to conduct market research to determine whether a 
    broader review of the contract, not limited to its delivery terms, 
    should be undertaken.
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    Current Contract Terms
    
        The wheat futures contract's current terms provide for the delivery 
    of warehouse receipts representing U.S. No. 1 or U.S. No. 2 grade soft 
    red winter wheat, dark northern spring wheat, northern spring wheat, or 
    hard red winter wheat in store at CBT-approved
    
    [[Page 65176]]
    
    (regular) delivery warehouses located in Chicago, Toledo and St. Louis. 
    (Only soft red winter wheat is deliverable at St. Louis.) U.S. No. 2 
    grade soft red winter wheat, U.S. No. 2 dark northern spring wheat, 
    U.S. No. 2 hard red winter and U.S. No. 1 northern spring wheat are 
    deliverable at par. U.S. No. 1 grade soft red winter wheat, dark 
    northern spring wheat, and hard red winter wheat are deliverable at a 
    premium of three cents per bushel. U.S. No. 2 grade northern spring 
    wheat is deliverable at a discount of one cent per bushel. Currently, 
    wheat is deliverable in Chicago at par, in Toledo at a discount of two 
    cents per bushel, and in St. Louis at a premium of eight cents per 
    bushel.
        The oats futures contract calls for the delivery of warehouse 
    receipts representing oats in store at regular warehouses in Chicago 
    and Minneapolis/St. Paul.
        Beginning in the year 2000, the corn and soybean futures contracts 
    will call for the delivery of shipping certificates providing for the 
    loading out of corn at regular shipping stations in Chicago and on the 
    northern Illinois River and the loading out of soybeans at regular 
    shipping stations in Chicago, St. Louis, and on the Illinois River.
        Under the current delivery procedures for the wheat and oats 
    futures contracts, warehouse receipt holders may require load out of 
    wheat or oats from regular elevators into vessels, barges or rail cars. 
    Regular warehouse operators must load out wheat and oats at specified 
    daily rates, which differ depending upon the mode of transportation 
    provided by warehouse receipt holders. Load out must begin on the third 
    business day following receipt of loading orders from the receipt 
    holder or on the day after the transportation equipment has been 
    constructively placed, whichever occurs later. Regular warehouse 
    operators are required to load out wheat and oats consecutively without 
    giving preference to products owned by the operator over the products 
    of others and without giving preference to one depositor over another. 
    The operator must in-load products into the warehouse consecutively in 
    the order in which they arrive at his warehouse at specified minimum 
    daily rates pursuant to in-loading orders previously received so far as 
    the warehouse capacity for grain and grade permits.
        An operator of a regular shipping station for corn or soybeans is 
    required to begin loading out product within three business days of the 
    operator's receipt of loading orders and cancelled shipping 
    certificates from a shipping certificate holder. A shipping station 
    operator must load out corn or soybeans at the station's registered 
    daily loading rate, giving preference to takers of futures delivery.
    
    Proposed Amendments
    
        The CBT is proposing to amend its wheat contract as follows:
        (1) The locational price differential for delivery of wheat at 
    Toledo would be changed to par from the two-cent-per-bushel discount 
    currently applicable to deliveries at that location.
        (2) The location price differential for delivery at St. Louis would 
    be increased to a premium of 10 cents per bushel from the current 8 
    cents per bushel premium.
        (3) The quality price differential for delivery of U.S. No. 1 grade 
    northern spring wheat would be changed to a premium of 3 cents per 
    bushel from par as presently specified in the contract.
        (4) U.S. No. 2 grade northern spring wheat would be deliverable at 
    par, rather than at a one cent per bushel discount as currently 
    specified.
        (5) Speculative position limits would be reduced during the last 
    five trading days in the March and May contract months to 350 contracts 
    and 220 contracts, respectively, from the existing spot month level of 
    600 contracts which applies uniformly to all contract months.
        The CBT also has submitted proposed amendments that would delete 
    all of these CBT's existing provisions relating to the in-loading of 
    wheat and oats at regular warehouses. In addition, the proposed 
    amendments would extend to wheat and oats for futures delivery the 
    preferential treatment that receivers of corn and soybeans for futures 
    delivery currently receive when load-out is ordered (over the warehouse 
    or shipping station operator's cash commitments).
        In addition, the proposed amendments would specify that, if a 
    lineup for loading out grain into barges from a particular regular 
    warehouse/shipping station includes both wheat and corn or soybeans or 
    both oats and corn or soybeans, then the minimum daily rate for loading 
    shall be equal to the highest loading rate applicable for any one 
    commodity in the line-up.\3\ To the extent that the proposed terms 
    applicable to the soybean and corn futures contracts differ from the 
    provisions of the Commission's Order of May 7, 1998, the Exchange's 
    request for approval of the proposed rule changes also constitutes a 
    request to the Commission to amend its Order accordingly. Publication 
    of these proposals, therefore, also constitutes notice of the proposed 
    amendment of the Commission's Order consistent with the proposed rule 
    amendments.
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        \3\ For example, in St. Louis the minimum daily loading rate is 
    1 barge per day for soybeans and 3 barges per day for wheat. If both 
    soybeans and wheat are in the line-up, the St. Louis warehouse/
    shipping station operator would be required to load a minimum of 3 
    barges per day total of beans and/or wheat.
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        Finally, the Exchange is proposing, for both the wheat and oats 
    futures contracts, amendments which would change the last trading day 
    for all contract months to the business day prior to the fifteenth 
    calendar day of the month from the current last trading day which is 
    the business day prior to the last seven business days of the month. 
    Along with this amendment, the last delivery day for these contracts 
    would be changed to the seventh business day following the last trading 
    day rather the last business day of the month as currently specified.
        The Exchange plans to implement the proposed amendments to the 
    wheat and oats futures contracts beginning with the March 2000 contract 
    month except for the proposed amendments to the loading provisions. The 
    latter proposals, which relate to the corn and soybeans futures 
    contracts as well as the wheat and oats futures contracts, would apply 
    to all grain loaded out against outstanding warehouse receipts on and 
    after January 1, 2000. In reviewing whether proposed amendments can be 
    applied to the terms of existing contracts, the Commission considers 
    the effect any such amendments may have on the value of existing 
    positions. In this regard, the proposed amendments to the wheat and 
    oats futures contracts will apply beginning with the March 2000 
    contract month which has not yet been listed for trading for either 
    contract. However, the proposed amendments to the soybean and corn 
    futures contracts will apply to certain currently-listed contract 
    months that expire after January 1, 2000 (as well as to all outstanding 
    warehouse receipts delivered on prior contract months for corn, 
    soybeans, wheat and oats). Accordingly, the Commission is seeking 
    public comment on what effect, if any, the proposed amendments would 
    have on the value of existing positions in the subject contracts.
        The CBT, in support of the proposed amendment to provide for par 
    delivery of wheat at Toledo, states that, ``[P]ar recognizes that 
    Toledo is the primary delivery point for the wheat futures contract and 
    that it is a key pricing point for soft red winter wheat.'' With 
    respect to the proposed increase in the premium for delivery at St. 
    Louis, the Exchange states that the change ``maintains the current 
    differential spread between Toledo and St. Louis.''
    
    [[Page 65177]]
    
        The Exchange notes that the proposed increase in the quality grade 
    differentials for U.S. No. 1 and U.S. No. 2 grade northern spring wheat 
    ``will bring the grade differentials for Northern Spring Wheat in line 
    with the grade differentials for Hard Red Winter, Soft Red Winter and 
    Dark Northern Spring Wheat.''
        With respect to the proposal to introduce lower speculative 
    position limit levels during the last five trading days of the March 
    and May wheat contract months, the Exchange states that, ``The purpose 
    of the decrease in speculative position limits is to satisfy CFTC 
    concerns on the adequacy of deliverable supply of wheat.'' The Exchange 
    further notes that, ``while the decrease in the speculative position 
    limits in the last five business days has the potential to reduce 
    liquidity, the proposed [lower] limits would not have restrained 
    positions held by speculators in the last five years.''
        The Exchange states that the proposed last trading day for both 
    wheat and oats is the same as that for grain futures contracts and thus 
    ``will standardize the last trading day for CBOT commodities of wheat, 
    corn, oats, soybeans, soybean meal and soybean oil.'' Finally, 
    according to the Exchange, the proposed load-out requirements to give 
    takers of delivery on the wheat and oats futures contracts preference 
    in loading grain over the warehouse operator's non-futures delivery 
    commitments ``will allow delivery wheat to be more accessible to takers 
    of delivery and allow the futures to be more reflective of nearby cash 
    grain prices.''
        The Commission finds that the proposed changes in wheat 
    differentials are of major economic significance and the publication of 
    the CBT's proposed amendments as a whole is in the public interest and 
    will assist the Commission in its consideration of the amendments. In 
    particular, commenters are invited to analyze the following issues and 
    to submit written data, views or comments relating to the CBT's 
    proposals.
        1. Would available deliverable supplies under the proposed contract 
    terms for wheat be sufficient to prevent or diminish price 
    manipulation, market congestion, or the abnormal movement of such 
    commodity in interstate commerce?
        2. Do the proposed locational price differentials for delivery of 
    wheat at Toledo and St. Louis reflect cash market price differentials 
    for wheat at such locations relative to cash market values at Chicago?
        3. Do the proposed quality price differentials for delivery of U.S. 
    No 1 and U.S. No. 2 grade northern spring wheat reflect cash market 
    pricing relationships between such wheat and other deliverable classes 
    and grades of wheat, particularly U.S. No. 2 grades soft red winter 
    wheat?
        4. Are the proposed amendments to the corn, wheat, soybeans and 
    oats futures contracts concerning load out of grain against warehouse 
    receipts and shipping certificates consistent with cash market 
    practices for those commodities at the regular warehouse at the 
    contracts' delivery points? If not, to what extent, if any, will the 
    proposed load-out amendments limit deliverable supplies available for 
    the wheat, oats, corn and soybean futures contracts?
        5. In light of recently announced plans concerning changes \4\ in 
    the ownership and/or operational control of the wheat futures 
    contract's delivery facilities, what effect, if any, will the increased 
    concentration in the control of delivery capacity resulting from these 
    changes have on the contract's susceptibility to price manipulation, 
    market congestion or the abnormal movement of wheat in interstate 
    commerce? To what extent do these changes reflect general trends in the 
    cash market?
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        \4\ On March 25, 1998, Cargill, Inc. announced an agreement 
    under which The Andersons, Inc. would lease Cargill's two grain 
    handling facilities in Toledo/Maumee, Ohio and provide on-site 
    management of those facilities, in addition to the Andersons' own 
    grain-handling facilities in Toledo/Maumee. Cargill also announced 
    that it would provide marketing services for grain originated from 
    all facilities owned or leased by the Andersons in Toledo/Maumee. In 
    addtion, on November 10, 1998, Cargill announced the purchase of all 
    of Continental Grain Co.'s grain merchandising operations, including 
    Continental's existing wheat futures delivery facilities located in 
    Chicago and St. Louis.
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        Copies of the proposed amendments will be a available for 
    inspection at the Office of the Secretariat, Commodity Futures Trading 
    Commission, Three Lafayette Centre, 1155 21st Street, NW, Washington, 
    D.C. 20581. Copies of the proposed amendments can be obtained through 
    the Office of the Secretariat by mail at the above address or by 
    telephone at (202) 418-5100.
        Other materials submitted by the CBT may be available upon request 
    pursuant to the Freedom of Information Act (5 U.S.C. 552) and the 
    Commission's regulations thereunder (17 C.F.R. Part 145 (1987)), except 
    to the extent they are entitled to confidential treatment as set forth 
    in 17 C.F.R. 145.5 and 145.9. Requests for copies of such materials 
    should be made to the FOI, Privacy and Sunshine Act Compliance Staff of 
    the Office of the Secretariat at the Commission's headquaters in 
    accordance with 17 C.F.R. 145.7 or 145.8.
    
        Issued in Washington, DC, on November 19, 1998.
    Jean A. Webb,
    Secretary of the Commission.
    [FR Doc. 98-31494 Filed 11-24-98; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6351-01-M
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
11/25/1998
Department:
Commodity Futures Trading Commission
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Notice of proposed contract market rule change.
Document Number:
98-31494
Dates:
Comments must be received on or before December 28, 1998.
Pages:
65175-65177 (3 pages)
PDF File:
98-31494.pdf