97-6470. Chicago Board of Trade Futures Contracts in Corn and Soybeans; Notice That Delivery Point Specifications Must Be Amended  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 50 (Friday, March 14, 1997)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 12156-12158]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-6470]
    
    
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    COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION
    
    
    Chicago Board of Trade Futures Contracts in Corn and Soybeans; 
    Notice That Delivery Point Specifications Must Be Amended
    
    AGENCY: Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
    
    ACTION: Notice of, and request for public comment on, response of the 
    Chicago Board of Trade to notification to amend delivery 
    specifications.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (``Commission''), by 
    letter dated December 19, 1996, notified the Board of Trade of the City 
    of Chicago (``CBT''), under section 5a(a)(10) of the Commodity Exchange 
    Act (``Act''), 7 U.S.C. 7a(a)(10), that the delivery terms of the CBT 
    corn and soybean futures contracts no longer accomplish the objectives 
    of that section of the Act. Under section 5a(a)(10), the CBT was 
    required to respond by March 4, 1997, seventy-five days from the date 
    of the notice.
        By letter dated March 4, 1997, from Patrick H. Arbor, to 
    Chairperson Brooksley Born, the CBT responded by providing a status 
    report to the Commission of its actions. In that response, the CBT 
    reported that a ``working alternative'' had been approved by the 
    exchange board and would be forwarded to the membership for a vote.
        The Commission is providing notice of the CBT's working alternative 
    in order to provide the public with an opportunity to comment to the 
    Commission on it. The Commission has determined that publication of the 
    CBT working alternative for public comment is in the public interest, 
    will assist the Commission in considering the views of interested 
    persons, and is consistent with the purposes of the Commodity Exchange 
    Act.
    
    DATES: Comment must be received by March 31, 1997.
    
    ADDRESSES: Comments should be mailed to the Commodity Futures Trading 
    Commission, Three Lafayette Centre, 1155 21st Street, NW., Washington, 
    D.C. 20581, attention: Office of the Secretariat; transmitted by 
    facsimile at (202) 418-5521; or transmitted electronically at 
    [secretary@cftc.gov]. Reference should be made to ``Corn and Soybean 
    Delivery Points.''
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Blake Imel, Acting Director, or Paul 
    M. Architzel, Chief Counsel, Division of Economic Analysis, Commodity 
    Futures Trading Commission, Three Lafayette Centre, 1155 21st Street, 
    NW., Washington, D.C. 20581, (202) 418-5260, or electronically, Mr. 
    Architzel at [PArchitzel@cftc.gov].
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Section 5a(a)(10) of the Act provides that 
    as a condition of contract market designation, boards of trade are 
    required to:
    
    permit the delivery of any commodity, on contracts of sale thereof 
    for future delivery,
    
    [[Page 12157]]
    
    of such grade or grades, 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. If the Commission 
    after investigation finds that the rules and regulations adopted by 
    a contract market permitting delivery of any commodity on contracts 
    of sale thereof for future delivery, do not accomplish the 
    objectives of this subsection, then the Commission shall notify the 
    contract market of its finding and afford the contract market an 
    opportunity to make appropriate changes in such rules and 
    regulations.
    
        The Commission, by letter dated December 19, 1996, notified the CBT 
    under section 5a(a)(10) of the Act that its futures contracts for corn 
    and soybeans no longer were in compliance with the requirements of that 
    section of the Act. The text of the section 5a(a)(10) letter was 
    published in the Federal Register and public comment was requested. 61 
    FR 67998 (December 26, 1996).
        The section 5a(a)(10) letter offered the CBT guidance in meeting 
    the requirements of the Act in the form of four conceptual alternatives 
    to the current delivery specifications. These four alternatives 
    constituted ``a range of possibilities which could constitute 
    'appropriate changes' by providing for the necessary, viable linkage 
    with the cash market.'' 61 FR 67998, 68013. In offering this guidance, 
    the Commission noted that:
    
    (b)y providing these alternatives, the Commission is not limiting 
    the CBT's ability to respond to this Section 5a(a)(10) notification, 
    nor is it specifying exact design criteria. Rather, these are 
    examples of various means by which the Commission believes the 
    objectives of the section could be met. In any event, the particular 
    contract specifications proposed by the CBT in response to this 
    notification, in order to meet the statutory requirement, should 
    provide for a linkage with the cash market through specific terms 
    which are in conformity with a substantial segment of that 
    underlying market.
    
    61 FR 68012.
        The four alternatives offered by the Commission included a prior 
    CBT alternative that was previously rejected by the exchange 
    membership. This alternative provided for a warehouse receipt contract 
    deliverable at Chicago (at par), Toledo, Milwaukee, East Central 
    Illinois and the Northern Illinois River. The Commission noted, in 
    particular, that any such proposal should be modified to include price 
    differentials reflecting the fact that corn and soybeans become more 
    highly valued the further south the delivery location is on the 
    Northern Illinois River. Another alternative offered was a shipping 
    certificate contract centered on the lower Mississippi River. The 
    Commission also offered cash-settlement as an alternative for 
    consideration.
        Finally, the Commission offered the alternative of increasing 
    deliverable supplies by adding to the contract shipping certificates 
    providing for delivery at barge loading locations on the Illinois River 
    and at St. Louis. Specifically, the Commission suggested that:
    
    (a)n alternative specification that could also result in the 
    necessary increase to deliverable supplies would replace the 
    existing warehouse-receipt-delivery instrument with a shipping 
    certificate and provide for delivery at Illinois River barge loading 
    facilities, in addition to the contracts' existing Chicago, Toledo, 
    and St. Louis delivery points. The Illinois River delivery area 
    could be specified to include all or a substantial part of that 
    River. The contracts' par pricing location could be shifted to a 
    delivery location/area that has an active cash market, with 
    locational price discounts for other delivery points/areas set at 
    levels that fall within the range of commonly observed cash price 
    differences between the specified delivery locations.
    
    61 FR at 68013 (footnote deleted).
        In publishing the section 5a(a)(10) letter to the CBT, the 
    Commission requested comment on general issues related to both the cash 
    markets for, and the CBT futures contracts on, corn and soybeans and on 
    the specific, relative merits of these suggested alternatives. The 
    working alternative under consideration by the CBT incorporates 
    portions of one or more of those suggested by the Commission, but is 
    sufficiently distinct that public comment on this additional 
    alternative would aid the Commission in its consideration of these 
    issues.
    
    CBT Working Alternative
    
        The CBT's working alternative includes the following salient 
    features:
    
                       Features of CBT Working Alternative                  
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                            
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Underlying Instrument:                Corn                Soybeans      
        (No changes to current    U.S. No. 1 +1.5       U.S. No. 1 +6 cents/
         quality differentials).   cents/bu.             bu.                
                                  No. 2 par...........  No. 2 par.          
                                  No. 3 -1.5 cents/bu.  No. 2-3% foreign    
                                                         matter -6 cents/bu.
    Primary Delivery Point......                                            
    (1)Illinois Waterway from                                               
     Chicago, IL (including                                                 
     Burns Harbor, IN) to Pekin,                                            
     IL at river mile marker                                                
     151.                                                                   
    Alternate Delivery Point....                                            
    (1)None.                                                                
    Locational Differentials....                                            
    (1)None, all locations at                                               
     par.                                                                   
    Delivery Instrument.........                                            
    (1)Shipping certificate                                                 
     only.                                                                  
    Maximum Certificates Allowed                                            
     to Issue.                                                              
    (1)Lesser of registered                                                 
     daily rate of loading for                                              
     the shipping station times                                             
     30 or 25% of net worth.\1\                                             
                                          Corn                Soybeans      
    Premium to Futures for        4 cents/bu..........  4 cents/bu.         
     f.o.b. water conveyance.                                               
    Premium Charge:                                                         
        (Previously referred to                                             
         as storage charge).                                                
    (1)$0.0012 per bu. per day                                              
     in Chicago.                                                            
                                                                            
    (1)$0.0010 per bu. per day                                              
     on Illinois River.                                                     
    Load-out Rate Barge.........                                            
    (1)At the registered daily                                              
     rate of loading for the                                                
     shipping station within 3                                              
     business days following                                                
     receipt of loading orders                                              
     or within 1 business day of                                            
     constructive placement                                                 
     whichever occurs later.                                                
    Vessel......................                                            
    (1)300,000 bu. per day with                                             
     3 days pre-advice.                                                     
    Rail........................                                            
    (1)Takers of delivery in                                                
     Chicago and Burns Harbor                                               
     will have the option to                                                
     receive rail loadout at the                                            
     rate of 25 cars per day (35                                            
     cars per day for batch                                                 
     weights and grades).                                                   
    Last Trading Day............                                            
    (1)The business day prior to                                            
     the 15th calendar day of                                               
     the contract month.                                                    
    Last Delivery Day...........                                            
    (1)The second business day                                              
     following last trading day.                                            
    Regularity Eligibility......                                            
    (1)Minimum $2 million                                                   
     working capital and minimum                                            
     $40 million net worth.                                                 
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ Current regular warehouses in Chicago and Burns Harbor would be     
      allowed to issue a maximum number of shipping certificates equal to   
      their current regular capacity.                                       
    
    
    [[Page 12158]]
    
        As Commission staff advised the CBT's Task Force during its 
    deliberations, the CBT alternative raises several important issues and 
    it differs from the Commission's in a number of significant respects. 
    The CBT alternative restricts the delivery area to only the northern 
    portion of the Illinois River. Unlike the Commission's suggested 
    Illinois River Shipping Certificate alternative, the CBT river-based 
    delivery area would not be in addition to the existing delivery points 
    on the contracts--including St. Louis and Toledo--but in lieu of them. 
    Moreover, the CBT alternative does not provide for locational price 
    differentials. Finally, unlike the contracts' current specifications 
    for loading against warehouse receipts, the CBT is considering 
    requiring that originators of shipping certificates maintain separate 
    queues, giving takers under the futures contract priority over other 
    load-out commitments.
        In order to assist the Commission in its consideration of these 
    issues, the Commission requests written data, views or arguments from 
    interested members of the public. Commenters are requested to analyze 
    and compare the relative merits of the CBT working alternative. 
    Commenters are specifically requested to address the following issues:
        1. Does the potential economic deliverable supplies or capacity on 
    the contract under the CBT working alternative meet the requirement of 
    the section 5a(a)(10) notification that the CBT modify the contracts' 
    specifications in order that they ``will tend to prevent or diminish 
    price manipulation, market congestion, or the abnormal movement of such 
    commodity in interstate commerce''? In particular, how does the 
    potential increase in delivery supplies or capacity which results from 
    the addition of the Illinois River shipping certificate compare to 
    deletion of deliverable supplies or capacity at Toledo? Is the net 
    result sufficient to prevent market disruption under foreseeable market 
    circumstances?
        2. How should the net change in economic deliverable supplies or 
    capacity be measured? How much of the load-out capacity of the barge-
    loading facilities on the northern Illinois River likely will be made 
    available for delivery, particularly in light of the queuing aspect of 
    the CBT working alternative? In this respect, within the defined 
    delivery area is there a sufficient number of facilities, and is their 
    ownership sufficiently dispersed?
        3. Are the regularity eligibility requirements a significant factor 
    in determining the economic delivery capacity under the CBT working 
    alternative's terms? Are they sufficient or necessary to assure 
    performance on the contract?
        4. What are the implications of the working alternative's proposed 
    single delivery area, even if total deliverable supplies or capacity 
    were increased?
        5. What are the implications of the absence of locational price 
    differentials? In particular, is the working alternative consistent 
    with the pricing of corn and soybeans in the cash market of the 
    proposed delivery area? What are the implications for the availability 
    of registered certificates?
    
        Issued in Washington, D.C., this 10th day of March 1997, by the 
    Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
    Jean A. Webb,
    Secretary of the Commission.
    [FR Doc. 97-6470 Filed 3-13-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6351-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
03/14/1997
Department:
Commodity Futures Trading Commission
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Notice of, and request for public comment on, response of the Chicago Board of Trade to notification to amend delivery specifications.
Document Number:
97-6470
Dates:
Comment must be received by March 31, 1997.
Pages:
12156-12158 (3 pages)
PDF File:
97-6470.pdf