97-4004. Alternative Method of Compliance With the Written Record Requirements  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 34 (Thursday, February 20, 1997)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 7675-7678]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-4004]
    
    
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    COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION
    
    17 CFR Part 1
    
    
    Alternative Method of Compliance With the Written Record 
    Requirements
    
    AGENCY: Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
    
    ACTION: Advisory; alternative method of compliance.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (``Commission'') is 
    issuing advice concerning compliance with the ``written'' record 
    requirements of Commission Regulation 1.35 (17 CFR 1.35) for customer 
    orders which are prepared and transmitted to and reported from exchange 
    trading pits by electronic order-routing systems and for customer 
    orders prepared by electronic off-floor order management systems 
    (referred to collectively as ``electronic order-routing systems''). The 
    ``written'' record requirements of Commission Regulation 1.35(a-1)(1), 
    (a-1)(2)(i), (a-1)(4), and/or (d) will be deemed satisfied, subject to 
    the terms and conditions set forth in this Advisory, to the extent that 
    such a system generates electronic rather than ``written'' records. The 
    electronic record of a customer order generated through an electronic 
    order-routing system must include any modification made to the order, 
    including any change or correction, as well as the time the 
    modification is recorded in the system. The system also must maintain 
    an accurate record of when and by whom records are accessed or 
    modified. In addition, such a system must capture all order-related 
    times required under these Commission Regulation 1.35 subsections to 
    the highest level of precision achievable by the operating system. In 
    this regard, such a captured time must be accurate at least to the 
    second. The time captured must not use a clock that can be modified by 
    the person entering the order. All electronic records of customer 
    orders created by an electronic order-routing system must be maintained 
    in accordance with the record retention requirements of Commission 
    Regulation 1.31.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Kimberly A. Browning, Attorney/
    Advisor, Division of Trading and Markets, Commodity Futures Trading 
    Commission, Three Lafayette Centre, 1155 21st Street, N.W., Washington, 
    D.C. 20581. Telephone: (202) 418-5490.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. Introduction
    
        The Commission is hereby issuing guidance concerning alternative 
    compliance with the ``written'' record requirements of certain 
    Commission Regulation 1.35 subsections which call for the preparation 
    of ``written'' records of customer orders. Specifically, Regulation 
    1.35(a-1)(1) requires that a futures commission merchant (``FCM'') and 
    introducing broker (``IB''), immediately upon receiving a customer's or 
    option customer's order, prepare a written record of such order, 
    including the account identification, order number, and a timestamp 
    indicating the date and time, to the nearest minute, the order is 
    received.1 Similarly, Regulation 1.35(a-1)(2)(i) provides that 
    each member of a contract market who receives a customer order on an 
    exchange floor that is not in the form of a written record immediately 
    upon receipt of such order prepare and timestamp a written record of 
    the order.2 For all such orders, Regulation 1.35(a-1)(4) requires 
    an exit timestamp indicating the date and time of the report of 
    execution.3 Regulation 1.35(d) provides that a contract market 
    member who executes a trade must prepare a trading card or other record 
    showing the fill information for the customer purchase or sale 
    order.4
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        \1\ Commission Regulation 1.35(a-1)(1) states that:
        Each futures commission merchant and each introducing broker 
    receiving a customer's or option customer's order shall immediately 
    upon receipt thereof prepare a written record of such order, 
    including the account identification and order number, and shall 
    record thereon, by time-stamp or other timing device, the date and 
    time to the nearest minute, the order is received, and in addition, 
    for [an] option customer's order, the time, to the nearest minute, 
    the order is transmitted for execution.
        \2\ Commission Regulation 1.35(a-1)(2)(i) states that:
        Each member of a contract market who on the floor of such 
    contract market receives a customer's or option customer's order 
    which in not in the form of a written record including the account 
    identification, order number, and the date and time, to the nearest 
    minute, such order was transmitted or received on the floor of such 
    contract market, shall immediately upon receipt thereof prepare a 
    written record of such order in non-erasable ink, including the 
    account identification and order number and shall record thereon, by 
    time-stamp or other timing device, the date and time, to the nearest 
    minute, the order is received.
        \3\ Commission Regulation 1.35(a-1)(4) states that:
        Each member of a contract market reporting the execution from 
    the floor of the contract market of a customer's or option 
    customer's order or the order of another member of such contract 
    market received in accordance with paragraphs (a-1)(2)(i) * * * of 
    this section, shall record on a written record of such order, 
    including the account identification and order number, by time-stamp 
    or other timing device, the date and time to the nearest minute such 
    report of execution is made. Each member of a contract market shall 
    submit the written records of customer orders or orders from other 
    contract market members to contract market personnel or to the 
    clearing member responsible for the collection of orders prepared 
    pursuant to this paragraph as required by contract market rules 
    adopted in accordance with paragraph (j)(1) of this section. The 
    execution price and other information reported on such order tickets 
    must be written in non-erasable ink.
        \4\ Commission Regulation 1.35(d) states, among other things, 
    that:
        Each member of a contract market who, in the place provided by 
    the contract market for the meeting of persons similarly engaged, 
    executes purchases or sales of any commodity for future delivery or 
    commodity option on or subject to the rules of such contract market, 
    shall prepare regularly and promptly a trading card or other record 
    showing such purchases and sales. Such trading card or record shall 
    show the member's name, name of the clearing member, transaction 
    date, time, quantity, and, as applicable, underlying commodity, 
    contract for future delivery or physical, price or premium, delivery 
    month or expiration date, whether the transaction involved a put or 
    a call and strike price. Such trading cards or other record shall 
    also clearly identify the opposite floor broker or floor trader with 
    whom the transaction was executed, and the opposite clearing member.
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        The Commission is issuing this Advisory to facilitate further the 
    implementation and use of electronic order-routing systems, including 
    both proprietary and exchange systems, in U.S. futures markets. This 
    action constitutes the latest in a series of steps taken by the 
    Commission to encourage the futures industry to realize the business 
    and regulatory benefits of such systems. Recently, to advance the 
    public dialogue on improving the efficiency of exchange and proprietary 
    order-routing systems and to discuss potential practicability issues 
    related to audit trail standards,5 the Commission convened a 
    public Roundtable in Chicago, Illinois on October 16, 1996. At that 
    forum, market users, financial market experts,
    
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    exchange officials and academics met to discuss the trade automation 
    issues currently before the futures industry. Discussion at the 
    Roundtable demonstrated the significance of the development and 
    implementation of exchange and proprietary electronic order-routing 
    systems to the continuing competitiveness of the U.S. exchanges and 
    their member firms.6 Previously, in February and March 1996, the 
    Commission received automation briefings by the Chicago Mercantile 
    Exchange (``CME''), New York Mercantile Exchange, Coffee, Sugar & Cocoa 
    Exchange, Inc., Chicago Board of Trade, and the Futures Industry 
    Association. The Commission issued a public summary of these 
    proceedings on May 10, 1996, entitled the ``Market Automation 
    Briefings-Commission Summary.''
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        \5\ Section 5a(b)(3) of the Futures Trading Practices Act of 
    1992 (``FTPA'') sets forth various heightened audit trail 
    requirements which are subject to a ``practicability'' standard.
        \6\ The Commission shortly will be issuing a public summary of 
    the Roundtable proceedings.
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        The Commission has recognized the important business benefits that 
    can result from electronic order routing systems.7 The Commission 
    also has emphasized that the FTPA ``does not mandate that its enhanced 
    audit trail requirements be met through electronic means.'' 8 
    Nevertheless, the Commission believes that ``the effective use of 
    technology [will ultimately] * * * provide safer, more efficient, well-
    supervised markets.'' 9
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        \7\ See the Commission's ``Report on Audit Trail Status and Re-
    Test'' dated August 12, 1996 at p. 42.
        \8\ See the Commission's November 1994 ``Report to Congress on 
    Futures Exchange Audit Trails'' at p. 62.
        \9\ See the Commission's May 10, 1996 ``Market Automation 
    Briefings-Commission Summary'' at p. 3.
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    II. Staff No-Action Positions Previously Taken Regarding Electronic 
    Order-Routing Systems
    
        To date, the Commission's Division of Trading and Markets 
    (``Division''), in consultation with the Commission's Office of 
    Information Resources Management (``OIRM''), has issued four no-action 
    letters relating to electronic order-routing systems. Each of the no-
    action letters provided that the use of a specified electronic order-
    routing system was not inconsistent with the ``written'' record 
    preparation requirements of Commission Regulation 1.35. Two letters 
    addressed systems which involved transmission of orders to and from a 
    trading pit. One of those letters dealt with a firm proprietary system 
    10 and the other an exchange system.11 The two other letters 
    involved firm proprietary electronic off-floor order management 
    systems.12 Essentially, those systems provide for the electronic 
    generation, modification, and maintenance of a firm's ``office'' 
    orders, that is, both discretionary and non-discretionary orders 
    required to be prepared pursuant to Commission Regulation 1.35(a-1)(1).
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        \10\ On July 8, 1996, the Division issued a letter to CME that 
    permitted the CME to allow one of its clearing member firms, Timber 
    Hill, LLC (``Timber Hill'') to use, on a permanent basis, a handheld 
    trading device and system (``Timber Hill System'') to receive 
    customer orders in and report executions from the equity quadrant of 
    the CME, described infra. By letter dated August 25, 1995, the 
    Division originally permitted the CME to use the Timber Hill System 
    for a 90-day pilot program. Extensions of that pilot program were 
    subsequently granted by the Division.
        \11\ On June 14, 1996, the Division issued a letter that allowed 
    a six-month pilot program to be implemented at CME under which 
    certain CME member firms and floor broker groups are allowed to 
    route customer orders for the front month of the CME's Eurodollar 
    futures contract through the CME's electronic order-routing system, 
    the ``Trade Order Processing System'' (``TOPS''), to the CME's order 
    receipt system, the ``Universal Broker Station'' (``CUBS'') (``TOPS-
    CUBS Program''), described infra. By letter dated December 13, 1996, 
    Division staff permitted CME to extend the TOPS-CUBS Program to June 
    13, 1997.
        \12\ On July 21, 1994, the Division issued a letter to Goldman, 
    Sachs & Co. (``Goldman Sachs'') permitting it to implement its 
    automated order preparation and record keeping system, Automated 
    Order Routing and Trade Accounting (``AORTA''). The AORTA system is 
    described infra.
        On September 12, 1996, the Division issued a similar letter to 
    Morgan Stanley & Co. (``Morgan Stanley'') permitting it to implement 
    its automated Order Management System (``OMS''), described infra.
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        In assessing both the Timber Hill System 13 and the TOPS-CUBS 
    Program,14 Division and OIRM staff found both systems are used to 
    generate, in electronic form, all of the customer order information 
    required by Commission Regulation 1.35. In this regard, both the Timber 
    Hill System and the TOPS-CUBS Program capture all modifications made to 
    a customer order, including changes and/or cancellations, as well as 
    the times of such modifications to the nearest second. Moreover, in 
    those cases where an order is filled partially, both the Timber Hill 
    System and the TOPS-CUBS Program reflect the actual quantity that has 
    been executed and timestamp the report of the partial execution to the 
    nearest second. Commission staff also found that both the Timber Hill 
    System and the TOPS-CUBS Program record the necessary Regulation 1.35 
    times for receipt of customer orders and report of execution times from 
    the trading pit and do so more precisely than is required under the one 
    minute standard in Regulation 1.35.
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        \13\ In summary, under the Timber Hill System, a customer enters 
    his order(s) electronically through a customer workstation(s) 
    located on his premises. That order then is transmitted via the 
    Timber Hill Network to a basestation located on the CME trading 
    floor in a booth in proximity to the CME's Standard & Poors 500 and 
    NASDAQ 100 futures and options pits. Upon receipt of the order by 
    the floor basestation, the basestation broadcasts it to a wireless 
    handheld device held by a Timber Hill floor broker located in the 
    trading pit for execution. Upon execution (partial or complete), the 
    order's fill information, as input into the handheld device by the 
    floor broker, is transmitted from the handheld unit back to the 
    basestation. The basestation then transmits the fill confirmation 
    information back to the customer at his workstation via the Timber 
    Hill System.
        \14\ In summary, TOPS is an electronic order entry, routing and 
    fill reporting system. Under the TOPS-CUBS Program, orders for the 
    Eurodollar futures contract are transmitted through TOPS, which 
    includes terminals located off the trading floor, to CUBS computer 
    terminals and associated software designed for use by a broker and/
    or a broker's clerk while at or in the trading pit. The CUBS system 
    is a wired broker workstation that sits on a pedestal in the pit. It 
    receives orders routed by TOPS and performs electronic order deck 
    management.
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        With respect to the storage of customer order data, both the Timber 
    Hill System 15 and the TOPS-CUBS Program 16 maintain 
    Commission Regulation 1.35 order information 17 for the 
    statutorily required five-year time period, as provided under 
    Regulation 1.31.18 The staff found that both systems
    
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    were not inconsistent with that regulation, which permits data 
    generated in electronic form to be maintained in optical media and in 
    other forms. In addition, all Regulation 1.35 order information stored 
    in connection with the Timber Hill System and the TOPS-CUBS Program, as 
    described above, is made available, in a timely manner, for access by 
    the Commission upon request in hard copy or machine readable form.
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        \15\ The Timber Hill System basestation maintains an on-line 
    file of all customer orders transmitted through it, including order-
    related timestamps. CME receives this file from the basestation via 
    a serial port feed (cable) on a real-time basis. Upon receipt of the 
    basestation data, CME maintains it in machine-readable form and will 
    keep it for the required five-year time period as provided under 
    Commission Regulation 1.31, described infra.
        Timber Hill also provides data for all customer orders executed 
    through the Timber Hill system to the CME's clearing system via the 
    on-line system which all CME member firms use to submit trade data 
    to the CME's clearing system, the TREX Record. In addition, customer 
    trade data are stored on the hard drives of customer workstations. 
    On a daily basis, Timber Hill backs up to magnetic tape all customer 
    trade data generated through the basestation, the main/''host'' 
    computer and the customer workstations. Within one week of being 
    generated, such data are placed on an optical disc(s). Twice a 
    month, duplicate optical disks are deposited in a vault located off-
    site.
        \16\ Customer order data generated by trading activity occurring 
    under the TOPS-CUBS Program are stored in two separate databases, a 
    TOPS database and a CUBS database. This storage is conducted in 
    accordance with the CME's routine security and disaster prevention 
    procedures. As a preliminary matter, data in both databases is 
    ``backed-up'' every evening onto a series of disk drives on the 
    CME's mainframe computer, where it is stored for 30 days. 
    Subsequently, CME stores the data from both databases in its 
    archives on cartridge tape in a secure location.
        \17\ Commission Regulation 1.35(a) requires, among other things 
    that each FCM, IB and member of a contract market must ``keep full, 
    complete, and systematic records, together with all pertinent data 
    and memoranda, of all transactions relating to its business dealing 
    in commodity futures, commodity options, and cash commodities.'' 
    Regulation 1.35(a) further provides that such records, which include 
    all orders (filled, unfilled, or cancelled) and trading cards are to 
    be maintained in accordance with the requirements of Regulation 
    1.31.
        \18\ Commission Regulation 1.31 requires, among other things, 
    that:
        All books and records required to be kept by the [Commodity 
    Exchange] Act or [Commission] regulations shall be kept for a period 
    of five years from the date thereof and shall be readily accessible 
    during the first [two] years of the [five] year period. All such 
    books and records shall be open to inspection by any representative 
    of the Commission or the U.S. Department of Justice [(''DOJ'')].
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        With respect to the TOPS-CUBS Program, Commission staff noted that 
    the Program's ability to record electronically and automatically 
    required Regulation 1.35 customer order information, including order-
    related times, enhances the preparation of customer data in terms of 
    accuracy and detection of changes and should provide regulatory 
    benefits.19 The Timber Hill System provides similar benefits.
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        \19\ See the Division's June 14, 1996 letter to Stephen Szarmack 
    of the CME regarding the CME's request for no-action relief for the 
    six-month pilot TOPS-CUBS Program at p. 13.
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        As previously noted, the two other staff no-action letters relate 
    to electronic office order management systems. Those systems involve 
    the electronic generation, maintenance and retention of office orders 
    related to exchange trading. In general, the systems are intended to 
    increase the efficiency with which these firms manage their order 
    books, including through increased integration with other firm and 
    customer activities. To date, both the Goldman Sachs AORTA system and 
    the Morgan Stanley OMS system do not involve electronic transmission of 
    orders to and from the exchange floor.20 Nonetheless, these 
    systems involve issues similar to those relating to the Timber Hill 
    System and the TOPS-CUBS Program, but within the confines of their more 
    limited operational scope.
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        \20\ For reasons unrelated to applicable regulatory 
    requirements, the implementation of both of these systems has been 
    delayed.
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        In assessing the AORTA and OMS systems, Division and OIRM staff 
    found that both systems record, in electronic form, all of the customer 
    order information required by Commission Regulation 1.35 for office 
    orders.21 In addition, both systems were found to capture the time 
    of order entry, the time of the transmission of a customer order to the 
    floor, and the time that a sales person enters order fill (partial or 
    complete) information into his system.22 Both AORTA and OMS record 
    any change to the customer order information, including the identity of 
    the sales person making any change and the time of such change.
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        \21\ In summary, the AORTA and OMS systems operate as follows: 
    sales personnel prepare a computerized office order ``ticket,'' 
    instead of a paper ticket, immediately upon receipt of a customer 
    order and enter all of the customer order information currently 
    required under Regulation 1.35. Both systems record, automatically, 
    the precise time to the nearest second at which an order was 
    entered. Upon order entry, sales personnel then send orders to the 
    floors by telephone and indicate by keystroke that the order has 
    been transmitted. Both systems automatically record a second time 
    indicating when the order was transmitted to the floor. Fill 
    information, including the report of execution time, is transmitted 
    back from the floor to sales personnel, who enter that information 
    into their system.
        \22\ This exceeds the requirements of Commission Regulation 
    1.35(a)(a-1)(i), which calls for the time a customer order was 
    received and, for options, also the time the order is transmitted 
    for execution.
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        With respect to data storage, both AORTA and OMS were found to 
    satisfy the record retention requirements of Commission Regulation 
    1.31.23 Moreover, both of those systems were found to provide 
    regulatory benefits in that they enhance the standards for office order 
    preparation as provided under Commission regulation 1.35.
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        \23\ AORTA stores all records of customer orders on optical 
    disk. Records produced and retained by AORTA are available for 
    production to the Commission or the DOJ in hard copy, on diskette, 
    or on CD-ROM.
        All records of customer orders generated on OMS are stored on 
    Morgan Stanley's Sybase Relational Database Management System 
    (``Sybase''). Morgan Stanley supplements storage of data on Sybase 
    with a hard copy/microfiche regime under which all transaction-
    related information is reproduced from Sybase on a daily basis and 
    kept either in hard copy or microfiche for five years.
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    III. Discussion
    
        The Commission believes that it is appropriate to take into account 
    and to facilitate automation developments that are occurring with 
    respect to exchange-related trading. The Commission also believes that 
    it is preferable to do so through the issuance of this Advisory rather 
    than through the case-by case approach taken by staff in response to 
    the aforementioned proposals for electronic order-routing systems. This 
    Advisory will enable new order routing systems to come on line without 
    the necessity of first seeking a no-action position regarding the 
    ``written'' record requirements of Commission Regulation 1.35. As a 
    result, the important business and regulatory benefits these systems 
    can provide will be fostered.
        For an electronic order-routing system to be covered by this 
    Advisory, it must satisfy the standards discussed below.24 Those 
    standards are consistent with the terms of the staff no-action 
    positions previously taken regarding such systems and take cognizance 
    of such systems' enhanced operational capabilities.
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        \24\ If an order-routing system did not satisfy any of the 
    standards set forth herein, then the operator of the system would 
    still be able to request an individual no-action position as 
    appropriate.
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        To the extent that an electronic order-routing system captures 
    information required under Commission Regulation 1.35(a-1)(1), (2)(i), 
    (4), and/or (d), and provided such system satisfies the standards set 
    forth below, a ``written'' record need not be prepared. To the extent 
    that a system is intended to satisfy one or more of those provisions, 
    then the system must include all information that otherwise would be 
    required to be in written form. Moreover, insofar as a system is used 
    to comply with any one or more of the foregoing sections, it must 
    include all information required by that section(s).25
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        \25\ In particular, the Commission notes that it is critical for 
    such systems to satisfy the account identification requirements of 
    Regulation 1.35.
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        The electronic record of a customer order generated by an 
    electronic order-routing system must include any and all modifications 
    made thereto. The record must include any changes and/or cancellations. 
    All order-related times required under Commission Regulation 1.35, as 
    well as the times for all modifications, are to be captured to the 
    highest level of precision achievable by the operating system. In this 
    regard, the Commission's experience is that these systems have the 
    capability, at a minimum, to capture times to the second. Therefore, 
    the Commission is requiring that such times must be accurate at least 
    to the second. In addition, the times captured must not use a clock 
    that can be modified by the person entering the order.
        These systems also need to conform to the Commission's record 
    keeping requirements as provided in Commission Regulation 1.31 for 
    computer-generated records. Pursuant to that rule, computer-generated 
    records can be substituted for a hard copy report when produced and 
    maintained on optical disk in conformity with 1.31(d), microfilm, or 
    microfiche. A computer-generated record used in lieu of a hard copy 
    must be transferred to one of these three permitted non-erasable media 
    ``as soon as is feasible.'' 26 In addition, ``appropriate 
    safeguards'' must be in place to protect any such records temporarily 
    stored in erasable form so as
    
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    to prohibit unauthorized access to the records and to provide for a 
    record of the identity of the persons who access such records and of 
    any modifications made.27 In addition, assurance must be provided 
    that a computer-generated record will be made readily available in 
    machine-readable media or hard copy to the Commission or DOJ upon 
    request. Moreover, records stored on ``machine readable media must use 
    a format and coding structure'' specified in such a request by the 
    Commission or DOJ.28
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        \26\ See the Commission's Regulation 1.31 final rulemaking, 
    which allows production of computer-generated records on optical 
    disk to be immediately substituted for hard copy reports for 
    purposes of record storage. 58 FR 27458 (May 10, 1993) at 27460. The 
    Commission also notes that it may be necessary to amend Regulation 
    1.31 to account for further technological developments.
        \27\ Id.
        \28\ Id. at 27465.
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        The Commission recognizes that the development of electronic order-
    routing systems continues to be in flux. The Commission intends to 
    continue to monitor that process with a view toward providing further 
    guidance by advisory or rule in the future. Among other things, the 
    Commission will evaluate the manner in which electronic order-routing 
    systems may interface with other audit trail recordkeeping practices in 
    place at an exchange.
    
    IV. Conclusion
    
        To the extent that a customer order is prepared and transmitted to 
    and reported from an exchange trading pit by an electronic order-
    routing system, or a customer order is prepared by an electronic off-
    floor order management system, and the standards set forth below are 
    satisfied, then the ``written'' record requirements of Commission 
    Regulation 1.35(a-1)(1), (a-1)(2)(i), (a-1)(4), and/or (d) will be 
    deemed satisfied by the electronic record generated by the system. 
    Specifically, such electronic records must:
        (1) Include the customer order information required under 
    Commission Regulation 1.35.(a-1)(1), (2)(i), (a-1)(4) and/or 1.35(d);
        (2) Include any modification, including any change and/or 
    cancellation, that is made to an order and indicate the time the 
    modification is recorded in the system;
        (3) Record all Commission-required and other order-related times, 
    including order entry and exit times, and the time of any modification 
    made to a customer order, including any change and/or cancellation, to 
    the highest level of precision achievable by the operating system, but 
    at least to the second. The times captured must not use a clock that 
    can be modified by the person entering the order;
        (4) Be kept in hard copy and/or allowable hard copy substitution 
    media, as provided under Commission Regulation 1.31. The stored records 
    shall be open to inspection by the Commission or DOJ as required under 
    Commission Regulation 1.31 and be made readily available to the 
    Commission or DOJ in machine-readable media or hard copy upon request. 
    Records stored on machine-readable media must use a format and coding 
    structure specified in the Commission request. To the extent that 
    records temporarily are stored in erasable form, appropriate security 
    measures must be implemented by the system operator to prohibit any 
    unauthorized access to the records and to maintain an accurate record 
    of when and by whom records are accessed or modified.
    
        Issued in Washington, DC on February 12, 1997.
    Jean A. Webb,
    Secretary of the Commission.
    [FR Doc. 97-4004 Filed 2-19-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6351-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
02/20/1997
Department:
Commodity Futures Trading Commission
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Advisory; alternative method of compliance.
Document Number:
97-4004
Pages:
7675-7678 (4 pages)
PDF File:
97-4004.pdf
CFR: (1)
17 CFR 1