99-9939. Fees for Applications for Contract Market Designation, Audits of Leverage Transaction Merchants, and Reviews of the Rule Enforcement Programs of Contract Markets and Registered Futures Associations  

  • [Federal Register Volume 64, Number 77 (Thursday, April 22, 1999)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 19711-19713]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 99-9939]
    
    
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    COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION
    
    17 CFR Parts 1, 5 and 31
    
    
    Fees for Applications for Contract Market Designation, Audits of 
    Leverage Transaction Merchants, and Reviews of the Rule Enforcement 
    Programs of Contract Markets and Registered Futures Associations
    
    AGENCY: Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
    
    ACTION: Final schedule of fees.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Commission periodically adjusts fees charged for certain 
    program services to assure that they stay in line with current 
    Commission costs. In this regard, the staff recently reviewed the 
    Commission's actual costs of processing applications for contract 
    market designations (17 CFR Part 5, Appendix B), audits of leverage 
    transactions merchants (17 CFR Part 31, Appendix B) and reviews of the 
    rule enforcement programs of contract markets and registered futures 
    associations (17 CFR Part 1, Appendix B). As a result of this review, 
    the Commission is adopting final fees for applications for contract 
    market designation for a futures contract, submitted to the Commission 
    for review and approval by contract markets, which will be reduced from 
    $7,900 to $6,800; contract market designation for an option contract 
    which will be reduced from $1,600 to $1,200; and simultaneous 
    applications for contract market designation for a futures contract and 
    an option on that futures contract, which will be reduced from a 
    combined fee of $8,500 to a combined fee of $7,500.
        In addition, the Commission is adopting the final fees for 1999 for 
    the Commission's review of the rule enforcement program at the 
    registered futures association and the contract markets regulated by 
    the Commission as described under SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION.
        Finally, the Commission is eliminating the list of fees for audits 
    of leverage transaction merchants because there have been no leverage 
    transaction merchants registered with the Commission for a number of 
    years and none is expected to register in the near future.
    
    DATES: The fee schedule for reviews of the programs of listed contract 
    markets and the registered futures association must be paid by the 
    named entities no later than June 21, 1999. The reduced fee for filing 
    futures and option contracts singly or simultaneously is effective 
    April 22, 1999. The list of fees for audits of Leverage Transaction 
    Merchants is no longer provided upon publication in the Federal 
    Register.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Donald L. Tendick, Office of the 
    Executive Director, (202) 418-5160, Paul Bjarnason, Division of Trading 
    and Markets, (202) 418-5459, or Richard Shilts, Division of Economic 
    Analysis, (202) 418-5275, Three Lafayette Centre, 1155 21st Street, 
    N.W., Washington, D.C. 20581.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
    
    I. Computation of Fees
    
        The Commission has established fees for certain activities and 
    functions it performs, including processing applications for contract 
    market designation and performing reviews of the rule enforcement 
    programs of contract markets and the registered futures association.\1\ 
    The starting point for the determination of all fees, including both 
    contract market designations and reviews of rule enforcement programs, 
    is the average of the previous three years' actual costs incurred for 
    each of the above-mentioned activities. However, as explained below in 
    section II, all contract markets pay a uniform fee for filing 
    applications with the Commission for the designation of new contracts. 
    With respect to the Commission's review of programs of rule 
    enforcement, a unique fee is assessed each entity, based upon the 
    actual costs of the particular review conducted at each entity. The 
    costs of performing a rule enforcement review at a contract market or 
    registered futures association vary according to the size and 
    complexity of the entity's program. To ensure that high fees do not 
    unduly burden small exchanges, the Commission's formula provides for 
    some reduction in the fee assessed, as explained in section II below.
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        \1\ See Section 237 of the Futures Trading Act of 1982, 7 U.S.C. 
    16a and 31 U.S.C. 9701.
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        Actual costs include the direct salaries of the personnel assigned 
    to each activity plus overhead. The overhead added to the direct salary 
    costs is based upon various indirect costs including: indirect 
    personnel costs (leave and benefits), rent, communications, travel/
    transportation, contract services, utilities, equipment
    
    [[Page 19712]]
    
    and supplies. All costs are accounted for by the Commission's 
    Management Accounting Structure Codes (MASC) system, which is an 
    agency-wide time accounting system. Overhead is calculated according to 
    a government-wide standard established by the Office of Management and 
    Budget. The overhead rate applied usually differs each year due to 
    fluctuations in the component costs included in overhead. The overhead 
    rate for fiscal year 1996 was 98%, for fiscal year 1997 was 91% and for 
    fiscal year 1998 was 104% (rounded to nearest whole percent). As stated 
    above, once the total direct personnel costs for each fee item have 
    been determined for each year, the overhead factor for that year is 
    applied, and the three-year costs are averaged. The three-year annual 
    average of costs is used to compute the fee schedule amounts, as 
    explained in detail below.
    
    II. Applications for Contract Market Designation
    
    A. History
    
        On August 23, 1983, the Commission established a fee for contract 
    market designation (48 FR 38214). The fee was based upon a three-year 
    moving average of the actual costs and the number of contracts, 
    reviewed by the Commission during that period of time. The formula for 
    determining the fee was revised in 1985. At that time, most of 
    designation applications were for futures contracts as opposed to 
    option contracts, and the same fee was applied to both futures and 
    option designation applications.
        In 1992, the Commission reviewed its data on the actual costs for 
    reviewing designation applications for both futures and option 
    contracts and determined that the cost of reviewing a futures contract 
    designation application was much higher than the cost of reviewing an 
    option contract designation. It also determined that, when designation 
    applications for both a futures contract and an option on that futures 
    contract were submitted simultaneously, the cost for reviewing both 
    together was lower than for reviewing the contracts separately. Based 
    upon that finding, three separate fees were established--one for 
    futures alone, one for options alone, and one for combined futures and 
    option contract applications (57 FR 1372). The combined futures/option 
    designation application fee is set at a level that is less than the 
    aggregate fee for separate futures and option applications to reflect 
    the fact that the cost for review of an option is lower when submitted 
    simultaneously with the underlying future and to create an incentive 
    for contract markets to submit simultaneously applications for futures 
    and options on that future.
    
    B. Fees for Applications for Contract Market Designation
    
        The Commission staff reviewed the actual costs of processing 
    applications for contract market designation for a futures contract for 
    fiscal years 1996, 1997 and 1998 and found that the average cost over 
    the three-year period was $6,810 per contract. The review of actual 
    costs of processing applications for contract market designation for an 
    option contract for fiscal years 1996, 1997 and 1998 revealed that the 
    average cost over the same period was $1,268 per contract. Accordingly, 
    the Commission has determined that the final fee for applications for 
    contract market designations as a futures contract will be reduced to 
    $6,800, and the final fee for applications for contract market 
    designation as an option contract will be reduced to $1,200 in 
    accordance with the Commission's regulations (17 CFR Part 5, Appendix 
    B). In addition, the final combined fee for contract markets 
    simultaneously submitting designation applications for a futures 
    contract and an option contract on that futures contract will be 
    reduced to $7,500 per combined filing.
        The fee for futures contract applications also applies to options 
    on physicals applications. Because the requirements for designation of 
    an option on a physical are substantially identical to those of futures 
    contracts, the same fee will apply to both types of filings.\2\
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        \2\ In this regard, under the Commission's Guideline No. 1, 
    which details the information an application for contract market 
    designation must include, all of the requirements for futures 
    contract applications (whether providing for physical delivery or 
    cash settlement) also apply to options on physicals applications, 
    plus several additional requirements that apply uniquely to options. 
    See, for example, 63 FR 38537, July 17, 1998.
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        The Commission is also today publishing separately in the Federal 
    Register a proposal to establish reduced fees for a limited class of 
    simultaneously submitted multiple contract market designation 
    application filings.
    
    III. Rule Enforcement Reviews of Contract Markets and Registered 
    Futures Associations
    
        Under the formula adopted in 1993 (58 FR 42643 (August 11, 1993), 
    which appears in 17 CFR Part 1, Appendix B), the Commission calculates 
    the fee for its review of rule enforcement programs based on its actual 
    costs. The Commission has provided for a downward adjustment to reduce 
    an exchange's fee below actual costs if actual costs (as a percentage 
    of total rule enforcement review program costs) are greater for the 
    particular exchange than that exchange's pro-rata portion of contracts 
    traded industry-wide (total contract volume for the exchange as a 
    percentage of total U.S. futures industry contract volume). As noted 
    above, this feature of the formula generally reduces the fee burden on 
    the smaller exchanges.
        Specifically, the fee required of each contract market is equal to 
    the lesser of: average annual costs based upon the three-year 
    historical average of costs for that contract market or one-half the 
    average annual costs incurred by the Commission pertaining to each 
    contract market for the most recent three-years, plus a pro-rata share 
    (based upon average trading volume for the most recent three years) of 
    the aggregate of average annual costs of all the contract markets for 
    the most recent three years. The formula for calculating the second 
    factor mentioned above is 0.5a + 0.5vt = current fee. In the formula, 
    ``a'' equals the average annual costs, ``v'' equals the percentage of 
    total volume across exchanges over the last three years and ``t'' 
    equals the average annual cost for all exchanges. The one registered 
    futures association regulated by the Commission, National Futures 
    Association (NFA), has no contracts traded, and thus, NFA's fee is 
    based simply on the average costs for the most recent three fiscal 
    years.
        Following is a summary of data used in the calculations and the 
    resultant fee for each entity:
    
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                                                                                      3-year average
                                                                      3-year average   percentage of     1999 fee
                                                                       annual costs       volume          amount
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    Chicago Board of Trade..........................................        $259,841         46.0317        $259,841
    Chicago Mercantile Exchange.....................................         228,215         35,6595         228,215
    New York Mercantile Exchange....................................         204,627         15.1517         174,062
    Coffee, Sugar & Cocoa Exchange..................................          66,814          2.2468          44,046
    
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    New York Cotton Exchange........................................         155,338          1,2997          83,824
    Kansas City Board of Trade......................................          15,055          0.4074           9,457
    Minneapolis Grain Exchange......................................          16,558          0.1979           9,216
    Philadelphia Board of Trade.....................................             624          0.0054             338
                                                                     -----------------------------------------------
        Subtotal....................................................         947,072        100.0000         808,999
    National Futures Association....................................         327,551             N/A         327,551
                                                                     -----------------------------------------------
        Total.......................................................       1,274,624        100,0000       1,136,550
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        Below is an example of how the fee was calculated for one exchange, 
    the Minneapolis Grain Exchange:
    
        (i) Average annual costs are $16,558;
        (ii) Alternative computation is:
    
    (.5)($16,558) + (.5)(.1979%) (947,042) = $8,279 + $937 = $9,216
    
        (iii) The fee is the lesser of (i) and (ii) = $9,216.
    
        As noted above, NFA, a registered futures association, has no 
    contracts and, therefore, is billed for average annual costs. The 
    Commission's average annual cost for conducting oversight review of the 
    NFA rule enforcement program during fiscal years 1996 through 1998 was 
    $327,551 (\1/3\ of $982,654). Therefore, the fee to be paid by NFA 
    pertaining to fiscal year 1998 is $327, 551.
    
        Issued in Washington, D.C. on April 15, 1999, by the Commission.
    Jean A. Webb,
    Secretary of the Commission.
    [FR Doc. 99-9939 Filed 4-21-99; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6351-01-M
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
4/22/1999
Published:
04/22/1999
Department:
Commodity Futures Trading Commission
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final schedule of fees.
Document Number:
99-9939
Dates:
The fee schedule for reviews of the programs of listed contract markets and the registered futures association must be paid by the named entities no later than June 21, 1999. The reduced fee for filing futures and option contracts singly or simultaneously is effective April 22, 1999. The list of fees for audits of Leverage Transaction Merchants is no longer provided upon publication in the Federal Register.
Pages:
19711-19713 (3 pages)
PDF File:
99-9939.pdf
CFR: (3)
17 CFR 1
17 CFR 5
17 CFR 31