98-19723. Concept Release on the Placement of a Foreign Board of Trade's Computer Terminals in the United States  

  • [Federal Register Volume 63, Number 142 (Friday, July 24, 1998)]
    [Proposed Rules]
    [Pages 39779-39789]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 98-19723]
    
    
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    COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION
    
    17 CFR Part 30
    
    
    Concept Release on the Placement of a Foreign Board of Trade's 
    Computer Terminals in the United States
    
    AGENCY: Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
    
    ACTION: Request for comment.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (``CFTC'' or 
    ``Commission'') is publishing this release to solicit the views of the 
    public on how to address issues related to the placement by foreign 
    boards of trade of computer terminals in the U.S. that would be used 
    for the purpose of facilitating the trading of products available 
    through those boards of trade. The Commission's staff has received 
    requests for no-action positions and other inquiries regarding the 
    Commission's regulatory treatment with respect to foreign board of 
    trade computer terminals placed in the U.S. In general, these boards of 
    trade, their members or their members' affiliates have sought 
    confirmation from the Commission's staff that the placement and usage 
    of trading terminals in U.S. offices of foreign board of trade members 
    and/or their affiliates would not require the foreign board of trade to 
    be designated as a ``contract market'' under the Commodity Exchange Act 
    (``Act''). In light of a significant increase in these types of 
    requests, the Commission believes that it is appropriate to address the 
    subject by way of the notice and comment rulemaking process. The 
    Commission intends to propose rules and ultimately to adopt rules to 
    govern the treatment of foreign terminals in the U.S. Toward this end, 
    the Commission believes that it is appropriate first to issue this 
    concept release to solicit public comment regarding issues raised with 
    respect to foreign terminal placement and usage in the U.S.
    
    DATE: Comments must be received on or before September 22, 1998.
    
    ADDRESSES: Comments on the proposed rules should be sent to Jean A. 
    Webb, Secretary of the Commission, Commodity Futures Trading 
    Commission, 1155 21st Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 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 ``Foreign Board of Trade Terminals.''
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: I. Michael Greenberger, Director, 
    David M. Battan, Chief Counsel, Lawrence B. Patent, Associate Chief 
    Counsel, or Lawrence T. Eckert, Attorney Advisor, Division of Trading 
    and Markets, Commodity Futures Trading Commission, 1155 21st Street, 
    N.W., Washington, D.C. 20581. Telephone (202) 418-5450.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    I. Background
        A. Prior Views of Certain Commission Staff Concerning Terminal 
    Placement in the U.S.
        1. Prior Staff Views Related to Listing Products of Foreign 
    Boards of Trade on Globex
        2. Prior Staff Views Concerning the Placement of Foreign Board 
    of Trade Terminals in the U.S.
        B. Commission Approval of the Trading of Products of Foreign 
    Boards of Trade in the U.S. Pursuant to Trading Link Programs
        C. Foreign Regulators' Treatment of U.S. Terminals in Their 
    Jurisdictions
        D. Order Routing and Execution of U.S. Customer Orders on a 
    Foreign Board of Trade
    II. Request for Comment
        A. A Possible Approach for Foreign Terminal Placement and Use in 
    the U.S.
        1. Petition Procedure
        2. Conditions of an Order
        3. Requests for Confirmation of Relief from Members and Their 
    Affiliates
        B. Definitional Issues
        1. Definition of Computer Terminal
        2. Where May Computer Terminals Be Located in the U.S.?
        3. Definition of an ``Affiliate'' of a Foreign Board of Trade 
    Member
        C. Other Issues Concerning Foreign Board of Trade Terminal 
    Placement in the U.S.
        1. Bona Fide Foreign Board of Trade
        2. Order Execution and Order Routing Issues
        3. Linkages Between Boards of Trade
    III. Conclusion
    
    I. Background
    
        In general, under Section 4(a) of the Act,\1\ a futures contract 
    may be traded lawfully in the U.S. only if it is traded on or subject 
    to the rules of a board of trade that has been designated as a 
    ``contract market'' under Section 5 of the Act,\2\ unless the contract 
    is traded on or subject to the rules of a board of trade, exchange or 
    market located outside the U.S.\3\ or is exempted from the Act. With 
    respect to the regulation of transactions involving foreign futures,\4\ 
    Section 4(b) of the Act permits the Commission to regulate persons who 
    offer or sell futures, but prohibits the Commission from adopting any 
    rule or regulation that: (1) Would require Commission approval of any 
    foreign board of trade contract, rule, regulation or action; or (2) 
    governs any rule, contract term or action of a foreign board of 
    trade.\5\
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        \1\ 7 U.S.C. 6(a) (1994).
        \2\ 7 U.S.C. 7 (1994). Section 5 of the Act authorizes the 
    Commission to designate any board of trade as a contract market 
    provided that the board of trade complies with certain conditions 
    and requirements set forth in the Act.
        \3\ Section 4(a) of the Act states in relevant part:
        . . . [I]t shall be unlawful for any person to offer to enter 
    into, to enter into, execute, to confirm the execution of, or to 
    conduct any office or business anywhere in the U.S., its territories 
    or possessions, for the purpose of soliciting, or accepting any 
    order for, or otherwise dealing in, any transaction in, or in 
    connection with, a contract for the purchase or sale of a commodity 
    for future delivery (other than a contract which is made on or 
    subject to the rules of a board of trade, exchange, or market 
    located outside the U.S., its territories or possessions) unless--
        (1) such transaction is conducted on or subject to the rules of 
    a board of trade which has been designated by the Commission as a 
    ``contract market'' for such commodity; [and]
        (2) such contract is executed or consummated by or through a 
    member of such contract market[.]
        \4\ The Commission has defined the terms ``foreign futures'' and 
    ``foreign options'' in Rules 30.1 (a) and (b). Commission rules 
    cited herein can be found at 17 CFR Ch. I (1998).
        \5\ Section 4(b) of the Act states in pertinent part:
        The Commission may adopt rules and regulations proscribing fraud 
    and requiring minimum financial standards, the disclosure of risk, 
    the filing of reports, the keeping of books and records, the 
    safeguarding of customers' funds, and the registration with the 
    Commission by any person located in the U.S., its territories or 
    possessions, who engages in the offer or sale of any contract of 
    sale of a commodity for future delivery that is made or to be made 
    on or subject to the rules of a board of trade, exchange or market 
    located outside the United States, its territories or possessions. . 
    . . No rule or regulation may be adopted by the Commission under 
    this subsection that (1) requires Commission approval of any 
    contract, rule, regulation, or action of any foreign board of trade, 
    exchange or market, or (2) governs in any way any rule or contract 
    term or action of any foreign board of trade, exchange or market.
    
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        Significant developments in technology in recent years have now 
    made automated trading methods an attractive addition or alternative to 
    traditional open outcry for trading of commodity futures and option 
    products on or subject to the rules of foreign and domestic boards of 
    trade. Automated trading systems make it possible to execute trades on 
    computer terminals within the U.S., no matter where the central 
    computer is located, thus providing U.S. customers with a potential 
    additional means of access to foreign products. Additionally, systems 
    have been developed that enable customer orders to be submitted 
    electronically to an FCM and then routed for execution on a foreign 
    board of trade with little or no human intervention by a member of the 
    foreign board of trade. These technological advances raise myriad 
    issues concerning the use of these technologies. In this regard, a 
    variety of issues has arisen concerning the degree to which a foreign 
    board of trade's cross-border trading activities in the U.S. are 
    subject to Commission regulation. Specifically, at what point does a 
    foreign board of trade's presence within the U.S. become 
    indistinguishable from that of a U.S. board of trade? Put another way, 
    when should a board of trade be deemed to be a U.S. board of trade that 
    is required to be designated as a contract market under Section 5 of 
    the Act in order to offer its products lawfully within the U.S.? Should 
    the Commission permit foreign boards of trade to place dedicated 
    computer terminals in the U.S., or permit foreign boards of trade or 
    their parties to provide persons in the U.S. with computer software 
    that provides electronic access to a foreign board of trade, without 
    the foreign board of trade first being designated as a U.S. contract 
    market? \6\ To the extent that ``terminals'' of foreign boards of trade 
    are allowed to be placed in the U.S. for trading without the foreign 
    board of trade being designated as a contract market, what conditions 
    should apply? And finally, with respect to the interface with foreign 
    board of trade terminals, to what extent should customer use of 
    automated order routing and execution systems be permitted and what 
    safeguards, restrictions and conditions should apply to their use?
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        \6\ A discussion concerning how to define ``computer terminal'' 
    or some similar term is found at Section II.B.1, below, and makes 
    clear that the Commission would intend this term (and this release) 
    to cover not only dedicated proprietary terminals, but also certain 
    other technologies that are used in a similar manner.
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        As described below, certain Commission staff have addressed some 
    inquiries concerning electronic access to foreign boards of trade from 
    within the U.S. by way of no-action letters. These staff letters do not 
    constitute Commission action and do not establish any precedent. They 
    merely convey the views of certain staff members that they will not 
    urge the Commission to take enforcement action for violation of the Act 
    or Commission regulations by the requestor of the letter if certain 
    conditions are met. The Commission is free to act contrary to the views 
    expressed by staff in such letters. The Commission now finds it 
    appropriate to review the views set forth by certain Commission staff 
    in these letters and to seek public comment on the proper approach for 
    oversight going forward. The Commission desires to act as quickly as 
    practicable in this regard and, accordingly, intends to adhere strictly 
    to the 60-day comment period provided for in this release.
    
    A. Prior Views of Certain Commission Staff Concerning Terminal 
    Placement in the U.S.
    
    1. Prior Staff Views Related to Listing Products of Foreign Boards of 
    Trade on Globex
        The first two letters issued by Commission staff that addressed 
    issues concerning automated trading in the U.S. by foreign boards of 
    trade involved trading through the Chicago Mercantile Exchange 
    (``CME'') Globex system (``Globex'').\7\ The first letter was a 
    response to a request from the CME for an opinion regarding whether 
    trading contracts of a foreign board of trade through Globex computer 
    terminals in the U.S. required the foreign board of trade to obtain 
    contract market designation pursuant to Section 5 of the Act (``CME 
    Letter'').\8\ In the CME Letter, the Commission's Division of Trading 
    and Markets (``Division'') noted that, consistent with Section 4(b) of 
    the Act, the Commission has not issued rules governing the terms and 
    conditions of contracts traded on foreign boards of trade or the rules 
    or actions of foreign boards of trade. The Division provided its view 
    that trading of contracts of foreign boards of trade through Globex 
    terminals in the U.S. should not cause the Commission to deem any 
    foreign board of trade for which products are listed through that 
    system to be a domestic board of trade. The Division noted, however, 
    that it would review the particulars of any proposal to trade the 
    contracts of a foreign board of trade through Globex in light of the 
    Commission's obligations under the Act to maintain the integrity of 
    U.S. markets and to provide for the protection of U.S. customers.\9\
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        \7\ Globex is an automated order entry and matching system for 
    futures and options on futures. See note 25, infra, and accompanying 
    text.
        \8\ See Letter from Andrea M. Corcoran, Director, Division of 
    Trading and Markets, to Carl Royal, Vice President and General 
    Counsel, CME (May 26, 1989).
        \9\ In a later no-action position, the Division also granted the 
    CME and Chicago Board of Trade (``CBT'') so-called ``pass the book'' 
    relief, which allows CME and CBT member firms the flexibility to 
    provide continuous access to Globex trading without the need for 
    members to staff their offices 24 hours a day. The letter permits 
    CME and CBT member firms to conduct Globex-related U.S. customer 
    business through the offices of a foreign affiliate without 
    requiring the foreign affiliate to register separately with the 
    Commission as a futures commission merchant (``FCM''). Thus, CME 
    contracts may be traded on Globex terminals located in non-U.S. 
    offices of foreign affiliates of FCM-registered CME members, and 
    U.S. customers may place orders for such contracts on Globex by 
    contacting the FCMs' affiliates during hours that the CME floor is 
    closed. The term ``passing the book'' is used to describe the 
    process by which a customer order that is placed outside of regular 
    U.S. business hours is transferred for entry into a Globex terminal 
    located in a non-U.S. office of a foreign affiliate of an exchange 
    member firm. CFTC Interpretative Letter No. 92-11, [1990-1992 
    Transfer Binder] Comm. Fut. L. Rep. (CCH) para.25,325 (June 25, 
    1992), superseded in part by CFTC Interpretative Letter No. 93-83, 
    [1992-1994 Transfer Binder] Comm. Fut. L. Rep. (CCH) para.25,849 
    (Aug. 9, 1993).
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        The Division issued a second letter on related issues to the Marche 
    a Terme International de France (``MATIF'') in response to MATIF's 
    request that the Commission confirm that it would not assert 
    jurisdiction over MATIF or MATIF contracts traded on Globex (``MATIF 
    Letter'').\10\ In its response, the Division, among other things, 
    reiterated its view that the mere trading of foreign board of trade 
    products through Globex terminals in the U.S. should not cause any 
    foreign board of trade for which products are listed through the Globex 
    system to be deemed a domestic board of trade.\11\
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        \10\ See Letter from Andrea M. Corcoran, Director, Division of 
    Trading and Markets, to Gerard Pfauwadel, President, MATIF (May 7, 
    1990).
        \11\ The Commission later approved a formal cross-exchange 
    access program between CME and MATIF. The Commission's approval of 
    the CME/MATIF cross-exchange access program and other ``trading 
    link'' programs is discussed in Section I.B., below.
    
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    [[Page 39781]]
    
    2. Prior Staff Views Concerning the Placement of Foreign Board of Trade 
    Terminals in the U.S.
        The Deutsche Terminborse (``DTB'') \12\ was the first foreign board 
    of trade to seek and receive a staff no-action letter for U.S. 
    placement of computer terminals for execution of trades on its market. 
    The DTB sought a no-action position from Commission staff regarding 
    placement of DTB computer terminals in the U.S. officers of its members 
    for their principal trading purposes \13\ and, where the DTB member is 
    also an FCM registered under the Act, on behalf of U.S. customers as 
    well, without obtaining designation as a contract market. After 
    analyzing, among other things, the German regulatory structure and 
    DTB's order processing network, clearing process and trading system 
    integrity and architecture, the Division issued a no-action letter 
    subject to the following conditions imposed upon DTB and their U.S.-
    located members who seek to place terminals in their offices.\14\
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        \12\ On June 18, 1998, DTB changed its name to Eurex Deutschland 
    as a step toward a planned merger later this year with the Swiss 
    Options and Financial Futures Exchange (``SOFFEX''). For the sake of 
    historical accuracy and simplicity we will continue to refer to the 
    DTB in this release.
        The DTB is headquartered in Frankfurt, Germany, and is a fully 
    automated international futures and option exchange on which all 
    trades are executed and cleared electronically. Trading is conducted 
    solely via computer terminals. The market participants' computers 
    and terminals are linked to the DTB computer center by means of a 
    wide-ranging telecommunications network. As noted above, DTB and 
    SOFFEX plan to merge to create Eurex AG. Further, CBT, DTB and 
    SOFFEX have signed a letter of intent to form an electronic trading 
    link between CBT and Eurex with the eventual goal of providing users 
    of Eurex and Project A (the CBT's adjunct electronic trading system, 
    discussed in Section I.C.below) with access to both markets from a 
    single screen.
        \13\ A ``principal'' trade under DTB rules is limited to a trade 
    made by a DTB member for its own account. DTB's definition of 
    ``principal'' is narrower than the definition of ``proprietary'' in 
    Commission Rule 1.3(y). A proprietary trade under Commission rules 
    would include not only trades of board of trade members for their 
    own accounts, but also those made by certain members' affiliates and 
    insiders for the their respective accounts.
        \14\ See CFTC Interpretative Letter No. 96-28, [1994-1996 
    Transfer Binder] Comm. Fut. L. Rep. (CCH) para.26,669 (Feb. 29, 
    1996). The Division's letter did not alter DTB's obligations to: (a) 
    request a no-action position from the Commission prior to engaging 
    in the offer or sale of any foreign stock index futures in the U.S.; 
    or (b) have any foreign debt obligation first designated as an 
    ``exempt security'' by the Securities and Exchange Commission 
    (``SEC'') before engaging in the offer of sale of any futures 
    contract or option thereon in the U.S. Section 2(a)(1)(B)(v) of the 
    Act states generally that no person shall offer or enter into a 
    contract of sale for future delivery of any security except an 
    ``exempt security'' under Section 3 of the Securities Act of 1933 or 
    Section 3(a)(12) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
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        1. DTB terminals will be located only in the U.S. offices of DTB 
    members;
        2. Only DTB members that also are U.S.-registered FCMs may trade 
    for customers--non-FCM DTB members are limited to principal-only 
    trading;
        3. DTB members will (a) provide the Commission and the National 
    Futures Association (``NFA'') with access to their books and records 
    and the premises where DTB terminals are installed, and (b) consent to 
    U.S. jurisdiction with respect to compliance with relief provided in 
    the no-action letter;
        4. All DTB members that will operate pursuant to the relief granted 
    will be identified to the Commission and NFA;
        5. Upon request, DTB (a) will provide the Commission with 
    information received from its members regarding the location of DTB 
    terminals in the U.S. and (b) will update the information on a periodic 
    basis;
        6. DTB will continue to comply with the International Organization 
    of Securities Commissions (``IOSCO'') ``Principles for Oversight of 
    Screen-Based Trading Systems for Derivative Products'';\15\
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        \15\ The Commission has adopted principles formulated by a 
    working group of IOSCO for the regulatory review of automated 
    trading systems. These principles address the following topics:
        1. Compliance with applicable legal standards, regulatory 
    policies, and/or market custom or practice where relevant;
        2. The equitable availability of accurate and timely trade and 
    quotation information;
        3. The order execution algorithm used by the system;
        4. Technical operation of the system that is equitable to all 
    market participants;
        5. Periodic objective risk assessment of the system and system 
    interfaces;
        6. Procedures to ensure the competence, integrity, and authority 
    of system users and to ensure fair access to the system;
        7. Consideration of any additional risk management exposures 
    pertinent to the system;
        8. Mechanisms in place to ensure that the information necessary 
    to conduct adequate surveillance of the system for supervisory and 
    enforcement purposes is available;
        9. Adequacy of risk disclosure, including system liability; and
        10. Procedures to ensure that the system sponsor, providers, and 
    users are aware of and will be responsive to relevant regulatory 
    authorities.
        See Policy Statement Concerning the Oversight of Screen-Based 
    Trading Systems, 55 FR 48670 (Nov. 21, 1990), in which the 
    Commission adopted the principles set forth in the IOSCO report 
    entitled ``Screen-Based Trading Systems for Derivative Products'' 
    (June 1990).
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        7. DTB will submit on at least a quarterly basis information 
    reflecting the volume of trades from U.S.-based computer terminals 
    compared to DTB's overall trading volume; and
        8. DTB will provide the Division with prompt notice of all material 
    changes to any DTB rules or German laws that may impact the provided 
    relief.
        In analyzing DTB's no-action request, the Division reiterated the 
    positions set forth in the Globex letters discussed above. The Division 
    concluded that no public interest would be affected adversely by DTB 
    members having access to DTB terminals in the U.S. because (1) no 
    customer trading would be permitted from U.S.-based terminals unless 
    the DTB member firm is registered as an FCM and (2) the Commission's 
    ability to inspect relevant books and records and the premises where 
    DTB terminals are installed, in combination with information-sharing 
    assurances received from the German Federal Securities Supervisory 
    Office (``BAWe''),\16\ provided an adequate basis for supervision of 
    such trading. The Division noted that the DTB and/or the relevant 
    German state or federal regulatory authorities have rules, systems, and 
    compliance mechanisms in place that address, among other things, the 
    processing of orders, including prioritization and execution (i.e., 
    DTB's order execution algorithm), and the timely availability of 
    information necessary to conduct adequate surveillance of the DTB 
    system for supervisory and enforce purposes.\17\ Further, DTB members 
    located in the U.S. are permitted to enter trades for, and access 
    trading screens of, only those contracts permissible for trading by 
    U.S. persons.\18\ Finally, the Division also emphasized the importance 
    of DTB's agreement to provide information to the Commission concerning 
    the location of terminals in the U.S. and the volume of trades 
    originating from the U.S.
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        \16\ The BAWe carries out oversight of the German securities and 
    futures markets pursuant to the German Securities Trading law and is 
    the central authority in Germany for cooperation with the Commission 
    in questions of futures trading oversight and in matters that are 
    subject to the oversight of the German Federal States.
        \17\ In this regard, DTB terminals located in the U.S. have a 
    systems capability to ``time stamp'' the execution of customer 
    orders so that an electronic ``audit trail'' is maintained.
        \18\ See note 14, supra.
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        The no-action position taken in the DTB letter was based upon, 
    among other things, the premise that the DTB is a ``bona fide foreign 
    board of trade'' whose main business activities take place in Germany. 
    By conditioning its letter on the DTB providing the Division with 
    quarterly updates of DTB's U.S.-originated trading volume, the Division 
    intended to leave open the possibility that at some point DTB's 
    activities in the U.S. might rise to a level that would necessitate 
    greater Commission regulation.
        The initial DTB no-action letter was modified in a no-action letter 
    to the DTB dated, May 9, 1997, in which the Division agreed not to 
    recommend Commission enforcement action if DTB terminals
    
    [[Page 39782]]
    
    were placed in DTB member firm booths at the CME, subject to compliance 
    with the terms and conditions of the original DTB letter.\19\ Under the 
    May 1997 letter, no enforcement action would be recommended if DTB 
    terminals are placed only at booths of firms that are both CME and DTB 
    members; only DTB contracts authorized or permissible for trading by 
    U.S. persons are eligible to be traded from the terminals; no CME 
    contracts are traded via the terminals; and CME has no involvement in 
    clearance or settlement of the contracts. Currently, there are no 
    terminals in DTB member firm booths at the CME.
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        \19\See Letter from Andrea M. Corcoran, Director, Division of 
    Trading and Markets, to Volker Potthoff, Senior Vice President and 
    Dr. Ekkehard Jaskulla, Deutsche Borse AG (May 9, 1997).
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        Pursuant to the DTB no-action letters, if a DTB member located in 
    the U.S. wishes to install a DTB terminal in its office, the DTB itself 
    must make a written filing to the NFA on behalf of that member. The DTB 
    makes this filing after a DTB member applies to the DTB to place a DTB 
    terminal in the U.S. The filing identifies the member that intends to 
    operate a DTB terminal in the U.S. and includes: (1) A Declaration 
    signed by the member whereby the member declares that it acknowledges 
    (a) the terms and conditions of the division's no-action letter and 
    that it will comply therewith and (b) its obligation to inform DTB in 
    writing of any changes regarding its DTB membership or the placement of 
    DTB terminals in the U.S.; and (2) an Acknowledgment of Jurisdiction 
    signed by the member whereby the member acknowledges that (a) for 
    purposes of the DTB no-action letter it is subject to the Act and the 
    Commission's regulations thereunder, (b) it will provide upon request 
    prompt access to original books and records and the premises where DTB 
    terminals are installed in the U.S., and (c) the person signing the 
    Acknowledgment on behalf of the member is duly authorized to do so. 
    Under the terms of the Division's no-action letter, the DTB member may 
    begin trading on its U.S.-based DTB terminal five business days after 
    the DTB member is identified to the NFA unless NFA or the Division 
    informs DTB otherwise. The DTB does not inform the member of the 
    approval of its application until the five-day period has passed.
    
    B. Commission Approval of the Trading of Products of Foreign Boards of 
    Trade in the U.S. Pursuant to Trading Link Programs
    
        As noted above, the Division issued the MATIF Letter which, among 
    other things, enunciated the Division's view that the trading of MATIF 
    products through Globex terminals in the U.S. should not cause MATIF to 
    be deemed a domestic board of trade. After the issuance of the MATIF 
    Letter, the Commission approved a formal cross-exchange access program 
    between CME and MATIF previously submitted by CME, which allows CME and 
    MATIF members to enter orders through Globex terminals located in the 
    U.S. and France, respectively, to buy and sell each other's 
    products.\20\ Under the program, the rules of the exchange whose 
    products are traded apply to the members of the other exchange when 
    they trade those products. Accordingly, CME members trading MATIF 
    contracts through Globex terminals located in the U.S. are subject to 
    MATIF's Globex trading rules, while MATIF members trading CME contracts 
    through Globex terminals located in France are subject to CME's Globex 
    trading rules.
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        \20\ The Commission took this action pursuant to the regulatory 
    authority provided under Section 5a(12), now Section 5a(a)(12)(A), 
    of the Act. See Letter from Jean A. Webb, Secretary of the 
    Commission, to Eileen T. Flaherty, Associate General Counsel, CME 
    (Sep. 25, 1992).
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        In approving the CME-MATIF proposal, the Commission evaluated 
    MATIF's Globex trading rules, CME and MATIF rules regarding member 
    eligibility to participate in the cross-exchange program, how each 
    exchange would monitor its members in trading the other exchange's 
    contracts, and the market surveillance and financial and sales practice 
    rules that would apply in each instance.\21\ The Commission noted and 
    relied on the fact that MATIF'S Globex trading rules governing trading 
    of MATIF contracts are generally the same as the CME's Globex trading 
    rules. Accordingly, all market participants trading MATIF contracts 
    through Globex are subject to the same trading rules whether they are 
    CME members or MATIF members.
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        \21\ The responsibility for enforcing each exchange's Globex 
    trading rules is shared between the two exchanges. Surveillance for 
    compliance with these rules by those trading over the Globex 
    terminals is the responsibility of the exchange whose contracts are 
    traded. Each exchange continues to carry out its own market 
    surveillance activities for all its contracts traded on a terminal, 
    and each exchange's members continue to be subject to their 
    respective exchange's financial and sales practice requirements.
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        Pursuant to its regulatory authority, the Commission also approved 
    last year a reciprocal trading link between the CBT and the London 
    International Financial Futures and Options Exchange (``LIFFE'').\22\ 
    The parties to this linkage have determined not to operate the linkage 
    at this time, but the Commission's evaluation of the proposal remains 
    illustrative of the Commission's standards and requirements for link 
    arrangements which allow products of foreign boards of trade to be 
    traded in the U.S. Under the CBT-LIFFE trading link, each exchange can 
    list the other's major financial futures and option contracts for 
    trading on its floor by open outcry during regular trading hours. In 
    evaluating this trading link, the Commission compared the trading rules 
    and member eligibility rules of LIFFE with those of the CBT and 
    analyzed the manner in which surveillance and investigations related to 
    contracts traded over the link could be implemented effectively at each 
    board of trade. The Commission approved this trading link under the 
    condition, inter alia, that LIFFE-designated contracts traded on CBT be 
    subject to CBT rules.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \22\See Letter and Order from Jean A. Webb, Secretary of the 
    Commission, to Paul J. Draths (May 6, 1997).
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        The Commission also has approved other trading arrangements 
    commonly referred to as trading links whereby products of U.S. 
    designated contract markets can be traded through automated trading 
    system terminals located in foreign jurisdictions.\23\ These 
    arrangements do not, however, allow the trading of the foreign 
    exchanges' products in the U.S.\24\
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        \23\ In 1995, the New York Mercantile Exchange (``NYMEX'') 
    established a linked access arrangement with the Sydney Futures 
    Exchange (``SFE'') and linked SFE terminals located in Sydney to the 
    NYMEX ACCESS trading system. In 1997, a linked access arrangement 
    between NYMEX and the Hong Kong Futures Exchange (``HKFE'') 
    permitted HKFE members to trade NYMEX contracts on NYMEX ACCESS 
    terminals located in Honk Kong.
        \24\ These arrangements are referred to in Section I.C., below, 
    which discusses foreign regulators' treatment of U.S. terminals 
    placed in their jurisdictions. See note 27, infra.
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    C. Foreign Regulators' Treatment of U.S. Terminals in Their 
    Jurisdictions
    
        Several U.S. futures exchanges have developed automated trading 
    systems for exchange members and their customers to trade in certain of 
    the exchanges's futures and options contracts after regular trading 
    hours. The CME's Globex system, for example, is an electronic trade 
    execution system developed by the CME and Reuters for trading CME 
    contracts, generally outside regular business hours.\25\ Globex brings
    
    [[Page 39783]]
    
    buy and sell orders together by linking individual terminals to a 
    central computer where orders are processed. NYMEX and the CBT also 
    have developed automated trading systems, known as NYMEX ACCESS and 
    Project A, respectively.\26\
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        \25\ Although the Globex system originally was intended as an 
    after-hours system for trading products otherwise traded on the 
    floor of the CME, the CME now trades E-mini Standard and Poor's 500 
    contracts both on Globex and on the floor of the CME, depending upon 
    the size of the order, during regular trading hours. The CME 
    recently announced that it intends to launch a new electronic 
    trading system, ``GLOBEX2,'' in September 1998 in a joint venture 
    with MATIF. GLOBEX2 will use a new system architecture that will 
    replace that currently used by the Globex system.
        \26\ Certain CBT contracts initially were listed for trading on 
    Globex. However, CBT later withdrew from participation in the Globex 
    system to develop its own automated trading system, Project A.
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        CME, NYMEX A and CBT each have computer terminals located in 
    certain foreign countries on which trading for foreign firms and 
    customers is conducted.\27\ CME Globex terminals are located abroad in 
    the offices of both CME members and offshore affiliates of those 
    members. Similarly, NYMEX ACCESS terminals are located in offices of 
    NYMEX members and affiliates thereof. The CBT Project A terminals in 
    the U.K. are located in branch offices of CBT members and in the 
    offices of affiliates of CBT members. CBT, NYMEX and CME permit users 
    of their terminals in foreign countries to trade for both proprietary 
    and customer accounts.
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        \27\ As of the beginning of 1998, the CME had placed Globex 
    terminals in the U.K., Hong Kong, Japan, France and Bermuda, NYMEX 
    ACCESS terminals were located in Australia, Hong Kong and the U.K., 
    and CBT's Project A terminals were located in the U.K.
        In certain cases, a board of trade in the foreign jurisdiction 
    in which U.S. terminals are located has formal business agreements 
    or arrangements with the U.S. exchange that has placed terminals in 
    that country. For example, agreements exist between NYMEX and the 
    SFE and the HKFE, respectively, which permit SFE and HKFE members to 
    trade products on NYMEX ACCESS. Likewise, there is an agreement in 
    effect between the CME and MATIF that permits, under certain 
    circumstances, each exchange to trade the contracts of the other 
    through Globex. As discussed above, the Commission has approved the 
    necessary CME and NYMEX rule changes enabling these agreements and 
    has permitted the trading arrangements proposed by these exchanges, 
    subject to certain conditions. See Letters from Jean A. Webb, 
    Secretary of the Commission, to Ronald S. Oppenheimer, Esq., 
    Executive Vice President and General Counsel, NYMEX (June 5, 1997); 
    Letter from Jean A. Webb, Secretary of the Commission, to Ronald S. 
    Oppenheimer, Esq., Executive Vice President and General Counsel, 
    NYMEX (Sep. 1, 1995); Letter from Jean A. Webb, Secretary of the 
    Commission, to Eileen T. Flaherty, Associate General Counsel, CME 
    (Sep. 25, 1992).
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        Foreign jurisdictions vary in their approaches to reviewing 
    requests by U.S. boards of trade to place computer terminals in their 
    countries. A non-U.K. board of trade that wishes to place computer 
    terminals in the U.K., for example, must first become a ``recognised 
    overseas investment exchange'' (``ROIE'') under Section 40 of the 
    Financial Services Act (``FSA'').\28\ Under the FSA, an application by 
    a non-U.K. board of trade for treatment as an ROIE is reviewed to 
    ensure, among other things, that: (1) Investors in the U.K. are 
    afforded protections at least equivalent to those provided by the FSA 
    for customers trading on or subject to the rules of U.K. boards of 
    trade; (2) the applicant is willing to cooperate by sharing information 
    with U.K. regulators; and (3) adequate arrangements exist for 
    information sharing between the applicant's regulator and U.K. 
    regulators. The FSA also provides that, in determining whether it is 
    appropriate to ``make a recognition order,'' a relevant consideration 
    is the extent to which persons in the U.K. and the country of the 
    applicant have access to each other's financial markets.
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        \28\ CME, NYMEX and CBT were designated as ROIEs prior to 
    placing computer terminals in the U.K.
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        The procedures for approval of U.S board of trade terminal 
    placement appear somewhat less formal in other foreign countries, 
    although each jurisdiction appears to require some form of review by 
    the jurisdiction's regulatory authorities prior to allowing a U.S. 
    board of trade to place computer terminals in its country. Australia 
    and Hong Kong, for example, appear to require foreign boards of trade 
    to be approved through an exemption process.\29\ In France, the 
    placement of terminals must be recognized by the Ministry of Finance. 
    Prior to installing terminals, the Commission des Operations de Bourse 
    (``COB'') must be informed of the dates that screens will be installed 
    and the location of their intended installation. Additionally, a 
    foreign firm operating a terminal must comply with French rules 
    governing disclosure and solicitation of the public. In Japan, approval 
    by the Ministry of Finance is necessary before trading may take place 
    through ``foreign screen-based systems.''\30\
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        \29\ On August 30, 1995, the Australian Federal Attorney General 
    signed a Declaration exempting NYMEX ACCESS from regulation under 
    the Australian Corporations Law, subject to certain conditions 
    pertaining primarily to information sharing between the SFE an NYMEX 
    and disciplinary procedures for breaches of NYMEX ACCESS trading 
    rules. With respect to the placement of Globex and NYMEX ACCESS 
    terminals in Hong Kong, the Hong Kong Securities and Futures 
    Commission requested that it be kept informed with respect to 
    operations of terminals with Hong Kong dealers and requested 
    information-sharing arrangements with the CME and NYMEX.
        \30\ The Japanese Ministry of Finance informed the CME of its 
    approval with respect to the placement of Globex terminals in Japan 
    by letter to the CME on February 8, 1993.
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    D. Order Routing and Execution of U.S. Customers Order on a Foreign 
    Board of Trade
    
        In developing the Commission's policy with respect to the treatment 
    of foreign board of trade computer terminals in the U.S., it is helpful 
    to review the basic methods by which a U.S. customer traditionally 
    placed orders for products offered on a foreign board of trade where 
    computer terminals of that exchange were not located within the U.S.
        U.S. customers traditionally have transacted business on a foreign 
    board of trade by way of: (1) Communicating through a U.S.-registered 
    FCM or IB; or (2) communicating with a foreign firm that has received 
    an exemption from registration under Part 30 of the Commission 
    rules.\31\ U.S. customers traditionally have placed orders via the 
    telephone. In the case of a communication from a U.S. customer to a 
    U.S.-registered FCM or IB, the FCM or IB generally would relay the 
    customer's order for execution to a foreign member of the foreign board 
    of trade by telephone or other means (e.g. facsimile transmission). The 
    trade would be carried on the books of the foreign firm on an omnibus 
    basis.\32\ If the U.S. customer communicated directly with a foreign 
    firm with a Part 30 exemption, the foreign firm simply would execute 
    the customer's trade either electronically or on the floor of an 
    exchange, as appropriate. With advances in available technology, many 
    intermediaries are implementing automated order routing systems that 
    allow customers electronically to submit their orders and that are 
    intended to pass these orders to a board of trade with minimal, if any, 
    human intervention. Issues concerning such automated systems are 
    discussed in Section II. C. 2., below.
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        \31\ In general, under the Commission's Part 30 rules, foreign 
    brokerage firms may be exempted from the registration requirements 
    of the Act provided that the Commission determines that the firm is 
    subject to comparable rules and regulations in its home country. 17 
    CFR part 30.
        \32\ If contact with U.S. customers is limited to carrying the 
    customer omnibus account of the U.S. FCM for execution on the 
    foreign exchange, the foreign firm would not be required to register 
    with the Commission as an FCM or receive an exemption under Part 30. 
    See CFTC Interpretative Letter No. 87-7 [1987-1990 Transfer Binder] 
    Comm. Fut. L. Rep. (CCH) para. 23,972 (Nov. 17, 1987).
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    II Request for Comment
    
        The Commission solicits comment from the public on the broad range 
    of issues related to providing electronic access to a foreign board of 
    trade from within the United States. The Commission notes that any 
    action taken
    
    [[Page 39784]]
    
    in this area must ensure the Commission's ability to carry out its 
    obligations under the Act to maintain the integrity of the U.S. markets 
    and to provide protection to U.S. customers. At the same time, the 
    Commission believes that its regulatory approach should not inhibit 
    cross-border trading by imposing unnecessary regulatory burdens.
        As a means of raising relevant issues and facilitating a discussion 
    thereon, this concept release provides a framework that may form the 
    basis for a later rulemaking. For example, Division staff has explored 
    the possibility of a new rule that might be included among the 
    Commission's Part 30 rules (concerning foreign futures and options 
    transactions) and could implement a two-step procedure similar in some 
    respects to that currently in effect under Rule 30.10 with respect to 
    foreign firms that wish to obtain an exemption from compliance with the 
    Commission's part 30 regulations.\33\
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        \33\ Commission Rule 30.10 is an exemptive provision that allows 
    the Commission to exempt foreign firms from the application of 
    certain CFTC rules and regulations (e.g., those governing 
    registration and financial requirements) based upon substituted 
    compliance by a firm with comparable regulatory requirements imposed 
    by the firm's home-country regulator. In considering a request from 
    a foreign regulatory or self-regulatory authority for Rule 30.10 
    comparability relief, the Commission considers, among other things: 
    (1) registration, authorization or other form of licensing, fitness 
    review, or qualification of persons through whom customer order are 
    solicited and accepted; (2) minimum financial requirements for those 
    persons that accept customer funds; (3) minimum sales practice 
    standards, including disclosure of risks and the risk of 
    transactions undertaken outside of the U.S.; (4) procedures for 
    auditing compliance with the requirements of the regulatory program, 
    including recordkeeping and reporting requirements; (5) protection 
    of customer funds from misapplication; and (6) the existence of 
    appropriate information-sharing arrangements. The Commission has 
    issued orders to permit certain foreign firms that have 
    comparability relief under Rule 30.10 to engage in limited marketing 
    activities of foreign futures and option products from locations 
    within the U.S. See orders of October 28, 1992 and August 4, 1994. 
    57 FR 49644 (Nov. 3, 1992) and 59 FR 42156 (Aug. 17, 1994), 
    respectively.
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        Under the potential procedure envisioned by the Division, a foreign 
    board to trade initially would petition the Commission for an order to 
    place its computer terminals in the U.S. without being designated as a 
    U.S. contract market. If the Commission issued the requested order, a 
    member of the board of trade or an affiliate of a member would then be 
    permitted to request confirmation of relief under the order to allow 
    the member or affiliate to place and to operate a foreign board of 
    trade computer terminal in the U.S., subject to appropriate conditions 
    contained in the order. The remainder of the concept release describes 
    this potential approach more fully and raises a variety of issues 
    concerning foreign board of trade terminal placement and use in the 
    U.S. generally. The following discussion assumes that a foreign board 
    of trade wishes to place computer terminal in the U.S. without being 
    designated as a contract market. Any foreign board of trade, of course, 
    may apply for designation as a U.S. contract market and, upon the 
    Commission's approval of such designation, may offer its products in 
    the U.S. subject to rules for U.S. contract markets.
    
    A. A Possible Approach for Foreign Terminal Placement and Use in the 
    U.S.
    
    1. Petition Procedure
        As noted above, under the possible approach envisioned by Division 
    staff, a foreign board of trade would be required to petition for an 
    order that would allow the foreign board of trade to place its computer 
    terminals in the U.S.\34\ In evaluating DTB's request for a no-action 
    position to allow it to place computer terminals in the U.S., the 
    Division reviewed, among other things the following information 
    provided by the DTB: (1) An overview of the DTB, including the 
    regulatory structure applicable to the operation of the DTB and 
    transactions thereon; (2) a description of the order processing network 
    utilized by the DTB; (3) a description of the DTB's clearing process; 
    (4) a description of the system integrity and architecture of the DTB 
    system, including security arrangements and procedures regarding system 
    failures; and (5) a description of the contracts which initially were 
    to be traded on the DTB through computer terminals located in the U.S. 
    and a discussion of the rules and regulations governing such 
    contracts.\35\ The Commission's petition procedure could set forth a 
    specific list of items, similar to the information reviewed as part of 
    the DTB's no-action request. The Commission could review all of the 
    information received from each petitioner and, based upon the totality 
    of the information received, make a determination as to whether an 
    order of exemption should be issued. Under such an approach no 
    particular piece of information would necessarily be dispositive. The 
    Commission could publish petitions in the Federal Register for public 
    comment.\36\ The Commission requests comment as to whether specific 
    tests should be used to evaluate each required item of information 
    rather than reviewing all of the information based upon a ``totality of 
    the circumstances.'' If so, what tests are appropriate for each 
    category of information discussed below?
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        \34\ Given the type and scope of information concerning the 
    foreign board of trade and its operations that likely would be 
    required to be provided to the Commission in a petition, it would be 
    most appropriate for the foreign board of trade itself to submit 
    such a petition. However, the Commission requests comment as to 
    whether it would be feasible and appropriate to allow the petition 
    to be submitted on behalf of the foreign board of trade by a member 
    of the foreign board of trade or an affiliate thereof or by the 
    foreign board of trade's foreign regulatory authority.
        \35\ Requirements with respect to the offer and sale of foreign 
    stock index futures and futures and option contracts on foreign debt 
    obligations would still be applicable if the Commission were to 
    adopt the procedure outlined herein. See also, note 14, supra.
        \36\ The Commission could, upon the request of a petitioner, 
    limit the public availability of information if it determined that 
    such information constituted a trade secret or that public 
    disclosure would result in material competitive harm to the 
    petitioner.
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        Six general categories of information might be requested.\37\ (1) 
    General information concerning the petitioner foreign board of trade 
    and its products; (2) information concerning the petitioner's rules and 
    regulations, the laws and regulations in effect in the petitioner's 
    home country, and the methods for monitoring compliance therewith; (3) 
    information related to the petitioner's technological system and 
    standards; (4) financial and accounting information pertaining to the 
    petitioner; (5) information concerning the ability of U.S. boards of 
    trade to place and operate computer terminals in the petitioner's home 
    country; and (6) information concerning the petitioner's intended U.S. 
    activities and presence. More specifically, the first category of 
    information discussed above (general information concerning the 
    petitioner and its products) could include information such as the 
    petitioner's main business address, its address in the U.S. for service 
    of process, a copy of the petitioner's organizational documents and a 
    list of the contracts that the petitioner desires to trade in the U.S. 
    through its terminals.
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        \37\ Information requested would be required to be translated 
    into English where appropriate.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The next category of information concerning the regulatory 
    requirements of the petitioner and its home regulatory authority might 
    include: (1) A copy of the petitioner's rules; (2) a list of the 
    persons responsible, and the supervisory arrangements in place, for 
    monitoring compliance with respect to those rules of the petitioner 
    that apply to activities conducted in the U.S.; and (3) a comprehensive 
    discussion of the regulatory structure in the petitioner's home 
    country. This last point might include information on the following: 
    (a) the regulatory authorities to which the petitioner is subject in 
    its home
    
    [[Page 39785]]
    
    country and the petitioner's status under the laws of the country; (b) 
    applicable requirements established by law or by regulatory and self-
    regulatory authorities in the petitioner's home country regarding the 
    protection of customer funds (including in the event of insolvency), 
    recordkeeping, reporting, timing of transactions, allocation of orders, 
    ability to obtain the identity of customers, including rules concerning 
    entry of account numbers, and trade practice standards, including any 
    rules concerning prearranged trading, noncompetitive trading, 
    ``frontrunning,'' trading ahead of customers, wash sales and bucketing 
    of transactions; (c) procedures employed by the regulatory and self-
    regulatory authorities in the petitioner's home country to ensure 
    compliance with their rules, including a history of market failures and 
    defaults in the petitioner's home country; (d) information sharing 
    arrangements in effect among the relevant regulatory authorities and 
    the Commission, including information concerning any blocking statutes 
    or data protection laws in effect in the petitioner's home country 
    which might impair the Commission's ability to obtain information under 
    such an arrangement; and (e) a discussion of any disciplinary action 
    taken against the petitioner by its home country regulatory 
    authorities. For petitioners that have received an exemption under 
    Commission Rule 30.10 or petitioners from a jurisdiction where another 
    entity has received such an exemption, providing the information 
    discussed above concerning the petitioner's home country regulatory 
    requirements would likely prove duplicative in some respects. The 
    Commission requests comment generally on means by which the Commission 
    could prevent unnecessary duplication of information.
        Information concerning technological systems and standards of the 
    petitioner might include a discussion of the order processing system, 
    its system integrity and architecture and its clearing and settlement 
    process. A discussion of the order processing system might include, 
    among other things, a complete discussion of the order execution 
    algorithm for each contract traded (to the extent the algorithm differs 
    by contract). The discussion of the system integrity and architecture 
    might include, for example, the location of computer servers (if 
    appropriate), information concerning the processing time for executed 
    transactions, security arrangements and procedures regarding system 
    failures that govern U.S.-placed computer terminals, including a 
    discussion of liability for market interruptions, and a discussion as 
    to whether these features and procedures differ (and, if so, how they 
    differ) from those used in the petitioner's home country or on 
    petitioner's computer terminals located in other countries, if any.
        General financial information and trading volume data might include 
    the petitioner's most recent annual financial statements and the total 
    trading volume, on a contract-by-contract basis and in the aggregate, 
    for its most recent year and most recent quarter (or other period if 
    data is not maintained on an annual and quarterly basis). The 
    Commission requests comment generally as to what types of trading 
    volume information are maintained by foreign boards of trade and how 
    volume is calculated. More specifically, the Commission requests 
    comment as to whether foreign boards of trade maintain information such 
    that it would be feasible to provide the Commission with information 
    concerning, for each contract traded and in the aggregate, the 
    percentage of trading volume that originates from U.S. registered FCMs, 
    the percentage of trading volume that originates from U.S. customers, 
    and the percentage of trading volume that originates from each other 
    jurisdiction where trading activity occurs.
        Each petitioner might be required to provide a statement from its 
    home country regulator as to any requirements or restrictions placed by 
    authorities in its home country on U.S. boards of trade with respect to 
    the placement and operation of computer terminals or the sale of 
    products in such country. If any such requirements or restrictions 
    exist, the statement might include a description of the restrictions or 
    regulations, be accompanied by copies of any relevant statutes or other 
    relevant legal materials, and include a description of the application 
    process, if any, required for a U.S. board of trade and their members 
    or affiliates of members to place its computer terminals and/or to sell 
    products in the petitioner's home country.
        Information concerning the petitioner's U.S. activities might 
    include, for example, information concerning the location of any 
    office, delivery points or employees of the foreign board of trade 
    within the U.S. and any marketing, educational or other activities in 
    the U.S. in which the foreign board of trade engages. The Commission 
    requests comment regarding the appropriateness of each of these items 
    of information and encourages commenters to address what additional 
    information might prove valuable for the Commission to consider in 
    evaluating a petition from a foreign board of trade to place its 
    terminals in the U.S.
    2. Conditions of an Order
        Under Commission Rule 30.10, the Commission may, upon request, 
    grant a petition of a foreign firm for an exemption from certain Part 
    30 requirements ``subject to such terms and conditions as the 
    Commission may find appropriate.'' In developing a rule concerning 
    foreign board of trade terminal placement in the U.S., the Commission 
    could reserve for itself similar flexibility to issue orders to a 
    foreign board of trade subject to appropriate terms and conditions. 
    Moreover, the rule could set forth certain conditions that the 
    Commission would include, at a minimum, in each order allowing U.S. 
    terminal placement by a foreign board of trade. The Division staff has 
    urged that many of these conditions should be similar to those imposed 
    upon the DTB in the Division's no-action letter, discussed above. The 
    Commission requests comment on the following list of conditions that 
    might be included in a Commission order:
        1. Computer terminals must be located only in the offices of 
    members of the foreign board of trade and their affiliates or in a 
    member's or affiliate's firm booth on the floor of a U.S. board of 
    trade;
        2. Any member or affiliate thereof that executes trades under an 
    order must be registered as an FCM unless it trades solely for its 
    proprietary account; \38\
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        \38\ ``Proprietary account'' as used herein has the same meaning 
    as that contained in Commission Rule 1.3(y).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        3. The foreign board of trade must notify the Commission in writing 
    immediately of any material changes in the information provided in its 
    petition to the Commission, in its rules, or in the laws or rules of 
    its home country;
        4. The foreign board of trade must notify the Commission 
    immediately of any Known violations of the order, the Act, the 
    Commission's regulations, or any other futures regulatory scheme by the 
    board of trade or by a member of affiliate operating under a Commission 
    order;
        5. The foreign board of trade, in order to ensure compliance with 
    the terms of the Commission's order, must conduct an on-site review of 
    the activities of each member or affiliate operating under the order at 
    least every two years or upon notice of a possible violation of the 
    order.\39\
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        \39\ Comment is requested on whether to permit the foreign board 
    of trade to arrange for NFA or a U.S. self-regulatory organization 
    to conduct the required on-site review. The Commission also requests 
    comment as to whether the on-site review is appropriate and, if so, 
    whether it should be conducted more or less frequently than 
    biennially.
    
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    [[Page 39786]]
    
        6. Satisfactory information sharing arrangements must be in effect 
    among the appropriate regulatory authorities and the Commission;\40\ 
    and
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        \40\ The Commission requests comment concerning whether its 
    rules should specify particular elements that would be required to 
    be included in a ``satisfactory'' information sharing arrangement 
    and, if so, what elements are appropriate. Additionally, the 
    Commission requests comment as to who should be a party to such an 
    arrangement. Should the arrangement be only between the Commission 
    and the relevant home country regulator, or should the foreign board 
    of trade itself be a party to the arrangement?
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        7. The foreign board of trade must provide the Commission with 
    quarterly reports indicating: (a) With respect to each contract traded 
    through U.S. computer terminals, (i) the total trade volume, and (ii) 
    the trade volume broken down by customer and proprietary trades; (b) 
    with respect to each contract traded through computer terminals in 
    other jurisdictions, the total trade volume by jurisdiction and in the 
    aggregate; and (c) with respect to all contracts traded on the board of 
    trade (whether traded in the U.S. or elsewhere), the total trading 
    volume for the period and by contract.\41\ If applicable, the foreign 
    board of trade also would be required to provide quarterly reports 
    indicating the stocks held as of the end of the quarter at any 
    warehouse maintained by in the U.S. for products that require physical 
    delivery;
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        \41\ The Commission requests comment as to what information 
    foreign boards of trade currently maintain concerning trading volume 
    on a jurisdiction by jurisdiction basis and, in particular, whether 
    foreign boards of trade currently maintain information in a manner 
    that would enable them to provide the Commission with quarterly 
    reports indicating the percentage of its total volume that 
    originated from each foreign jurisdiction, whether from terminals or 
    otherwise.
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        In addition to the conditions discussed above, the Commission could 
    retain the authority to condition, modify, suspend, terminate or 
    otherwise restrict an order that it issues, as applied to a specific 
    person operating thereunder or with respect to the order in its 
    entirety. The Commission could then take action, for example, if the 
    Commission determined that the foreign board of trade that received and 
    order, or an entity operating in the U.S. based on the order, ceased to 
    comply with a stated condition of the order or that continuation of the 
    order would be contrary to public policy or the public interest.
    3. Request for Confirmation of Relief from Members and Their Affiliates
        Under the possible approach the Division envisions, following the 
    issuance of an order, an entity that desired to operate a computer 
    terminal in the U.S. under the order would request confirmation of its 
    ability to do so by filing a confirmation request with NFA. Such a 
    procedure would be similar to the current procedure followed by DTB on 
    behalf of its members that wish to install DTB terminals in the U.S. 
    under the DTB's no-action letter.
        Such a written confirmation request would be signed by a duly 
    authorized representative of the foreign board of trade member or 
    affiliate, and the member or affiliate would do the following: (1) 
    Certify that it is a member or an affiliate of a member in good 
    standing of a foreign board of trade that has received a Commission 
    order; (2) certify that it will take reasonable precautions to 
    safeguard access to computer terminals operated by it under the order; 
    (3) agree to comply with all applicable conditions of the order; (4) 
    provide the NFA with the address where computer terminals are to be 
    kept and the number of terminals to be placed in each location.\42\ (5) 
    acknowledge that is subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission and 
    the U.S. with respect to its activities related to the order; (6) agree 
    to keep books and records in accordance with the Act and the 
    Commission's regulations, if the member or affiliate is registered as 
    an FCM, or in accordance with Rule 1.3 if not registered;\43\ (7) agree 
    to provide the Commission with prompt access to the premises where 
    computer terminals are located;\44\ (8) indicate what type of business 
    it intends to operate in the U.S. and whether it will be trading for 
    its proprietary account, for customer accounts or both (and if the 
    person intends to engage in customer business, certify that it is or 
    will be registered as an FCM and acknowledge that it is subject to all 
    applicable Commission regulations); (9) provide a description of any 
    litigation, enforcement actions, disciplinary proceedings or other 
    civil, criminal or administrative proceedings, within the prior five 
    years, involving the requester or any principal of the requester (as 
    the term ``principal'' is defined in Commission Rule 3.1(a)), in which 
    there was an allegation of fraud, customer abuse, or violation of 
    applicable regulatory or board of trade requirements; (10) agree to 
    provide NFA and the Commission with immediate written notice of any 
    material changes in its structure, status or operations that might 
    impact the entity's activities under the order; (11) agree to provide 
    additional information as necessary; and (12) make any other 
    certifications that may be required by the order. The Commission 
    requests comment as to the appropriateness of these potential 
    requirements. Are any of these requirements unduly burdensome? Are 
    there any additional certifications, undertakings, or acknowledgments 
    that the Commission should consider including?
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \42\ Such information would be required to be updated when a 
    change occurs. The Commission requests comment as to whether ten 
    business days is a reasonable time period in which to update such 
    information.
        \43\ In the case of an unregistered entity engaged only in 
    proprietary trading, the entity could keep either its original books 
    and records or a complete copy of its books and records in its U.S. 
    office. However, if copies were kept rather than originals, the 
    member or affiliate thereof would be required to: (1) state why it 
    is necessary or beneficial to keep the originals outside the U.S.; 
    (2) provide the address where they are kept; (3) agree to provide 
    the books and records in the U.S. within 72 hours of a request of a 
    Commission or NFA representative; and (4) certify that no foreign 
    laws would prevent the Commission's inspection of the books and 
    records.
        \44\ If the member or affiliate is a registered FCM that 
    utilizes an automated order routing system for transmitting trades 
    submitted electronically from customers, the FCM could be required 
    to keep a list of the names and addresses of each customer who 
    utilizes this system and make such list available to the Commission 
    or a Commission representative upon request.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Such a confirmation request could become effective automatically 
    ten business days after its receipt by NFA unless the requester was 
    notified otherwise. If contacted, the requester would have to receive 
    written notification from the Commission or NFA prior to placing any 
    terminals in the U.S.
    
    B. Definitional Issues
    
        As discussed above, the Division envisions a regulatory approach 
    that would provide a means for a foreign board of trade to petition the 
    Commission to place computer terminals in the U.S. for use by its 
    members and their affiliates. Initially, several definitional issues 
    are raised by such an approach. For example: (a) how should the term 
    ``computer terminal'' be defined? (b) where in the U.S. may computer 
    terminals be placed; and (c) who is an ``affiliate'' of a foreign board 
    of trade member? These issues are discussed individually below, and the 
    Commission requests comment on them.
    1. Definition of Computer Terminal
        The Commission believes that the term ``computer terminal,'' or 
    some similar term should be defined broadly under any rule adopted 
    regarding foreign board of trade terminal placement in the U.S. to 
    anticipate, to the extent practicable, the evolution of electronic 
    trading systems. By defining such a term broadly to anticipate
    
    [[Page 39787]]
    
    changes in technology, the Commission would hope to ensure that a 
    person could not circumvent any rules adopted by the Commission simply 
    by contending that a particular device is not a computer terminal even 
    though the device performs essentially the same operation. 
    Historically, the term ``computer terminal'' was thought to be a 
    dedicated proprietary computer system that provided access to a board 
    of trade (e.g., a DTB computer terminal). This perception is rapidly 
    changing, however, as new technologies enter the marketplace. The 
    Commission anticipates that ``computer terminal'' or some similar term 
    would be defined for purposes of proposed rules in such a way as to 
    contemplate such changes, and would include not only proprietary 
    computer systems, but also any other device that currently is being 
    used or may be used in the future to provide access to a foreign board 
    of trade in the same manner and providing the same functionality as a 
    proprietary system. Such devices might take the form of specialized 
    computer software, a telephonic system, or Internet access to a foreign 
    board of trade through a personal computer, telephone or similar device 
    which is provided in a manner that makes Internet use the functional 
    equivalent of a proprietary terminal. The Commission requests comment 
    as to whether a mechanism that enables a customer order to be submitted 
    electronically to an FCM and subsequently to a foreign board of trade 
    without the necessity for human intervention at the FCM should be 
    considered a ``computer terminal'' under Commission rules.\45\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \45\ See also, discussion of automated order routing and 
    execution issues in section II.C.2, below.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        As new technology evolves, new types of access to foreign markets 
    likely will develop. The Internet, which has seen tremendous growth in 
    recent years, provides one likely source for such development.\46\ The 
    Commission solicits comment on what types of ``computer'' or other 
    technological systems currently are in use or anticipated that could 
    provide access to a foreign board of trade. To what extent is Internet 
    access to foreign futures and options currently available? Is direct 
    Internet access (i.e., not conducted through an intermediary) currently 
    available to any foreign board of trade? To what extent is the Internet 
    currently being used for the placement of orders for futures and option 
    products with U.S. or foreign FCMs? How should the Commission define 
    ``computer terminal'' so as to be sufficiently inclusive?
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \46\ In this regard, FutureCom, a U.S. exchange owned by the 
    Texas Beef Trading Co., Ltd., has applied to the Commission for 
    contract market designation. If its application is approved, 
    FutureCom would be the first U.S. Internet-based futures and option 
    exchange.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    2. Where May Computer Terminals Be Located in the U.S.?
        The Division's approach would permit members of a foreign board of 
    trade and members' affiliates to place computer terminals in their U.S. 
    offices or in their firm booths on the floor of a U.S. board of trade. 
    The Division does not currently contemplate that proposed rules would 
    permit the installation of a foreign computer terminal that provides a 
    customer a direct link to a foreign board of trade's floor or computer 
    system without first flowing through a registered FCM that is a member 
    or affiliate thereof of the foreign board of trade. Neither does the 
    Division contemplate that the proposed rules would permit any customer 
    to utilize a foreign board of trade's computer terminal maintained by a 
    member of the foreign board of trade or its affiliate to achieve such 
    direct access. The Commission requests comment as to these positions of 
    the Division and as to what safeguards might be required to prevent 
    improper access to a foreign board of trade's computer terminals in the 
    U.S.
    3. Definition of an ``Affiliate'' of a Foreign Board of Trade Member
        The Division's approach would allow affiliates of members of a 
    foreign board of trade to operate foreign board to trade computer 
    terminals pursuant to a Commission Order. This position raises the 
    issue of who is a bona fide affiliate of a member. Arguably, only those 
    person who have a substantial ownership connection to a member should 
    be permitted to have access to a foreign board of trade's U.S.-located 
    terminals, this preventing customers from circumventing Commission 
    rules by becoming an ``affiliate'' in name only. An affiliated of a 
    foreign board of trade member for those purposes could be defined as: 
    (1) A person that owns 50 percent or more of a member (i.e, a foreign 
    board of trade member's parent company with an ownership interest in 
    the member of 50 percent or more); (2) a person owned 50 percent or 
    more by a member (i.e., a foreign board of trade member's 50 percent or 
    more owned subsidiary); (3) a person that is owned 50 percent or more 
    by a third person that also owns 50 percent or more of a member (i.e., 
    a member's sister company where both the member and the sister company 
    are owned 50 percent or more by a third person); or (4) any person that 
    otherwise has control, is controlled by or is owned 50 percent or more 
    by a third person that has control of a member. The Commission requests 
    comments as to the appropriateness of this definition. Should the 
    Commission permit affiliates of foreign board of trade members to 
    operate computer terminals in the U.S. absent the foreign board of 
    trade's designation as a U.S. contract market? Is a 50 percent 
    threshold too high or too low?
        The Commission is also concerned that foreign board of trade do not 
    create categories of membership without creating meaningful 
    distinctions between a member of a foreign board of trade and a 
    customer thereof. The Commission requests comment as to whether the 
    Commission should consider imposing any requirements that would enable 
    the Commission to ensure that a member of a foreign board of trade is a 
    bona fide member. If so, what types of requirements are appropriate?
    
    C. Other Issues Concerning Foreign Board of Trade Terminal Placements 
    in the U.S.
    
    1. Bona Fide Foreign Board of Trade
        The Division in the DTB letter took the position that only a bona 
    fide foreign board of trade should be entitle to place and operate 
    computer terminals in the U.S. without being designated as a contract 
    market. At some level of U.S. activity, a board of trade can no longer 
    claim to be a board of trade located outside the U.S. and would be 
    required to be designated as contract market. The Division's approach 
    describe above would establish a number of requirements that are aimed 
    specifically at providing the Commission with initial and ongoing 
    information concerning a foreign board of trade's U.S. presence. For 
    example, as noted above, the Commission could receive in a petition 
    from a foreign board of trade information concerning: (1) Any physical 
    presence the board of trade has in the U.S.; and (2) any marketing, 
    education or other activities that are conducted by a foreign board of 
    trade in the U.S. or that otherwise are directed toward U.S. customers. 
    This information could be required to be updated in the event of a 
    material change. The Commission also could receive in a foreign board 
    of trade's petition certain information concerning the foreign board of 
    trade's recent trade volume originating from the U.S. and the current 
    quantity of stocks, if any, held in any U.S.-located warehouses. Such 
    information could be required to
    
    [[Page 39788]]
    
    be provided quarterly. Information about a foreign board of trade's 
    activities and presence in the U.S. is relevant in determining whether 
    a board of trade should be required to be designated as a U.S. contract 
    market. Likewise, the percentage of a foreign board of trade's volume 
    that originates from the U.S. also is relevant in determining such 
    questions. The Commission solicits public comment as to whether it 
    should define in its rules the level of U.S. activity requiring 
    contract market designation. If so, how should the level be defined? 
    Additionally, the Commission requests comment as to any U.S. 
    activities, other than those discussed above, that might be relevant to 
    a determination as to whether a board of trade that desires to place 
    its computer terminals in the U.S. is a bona fide foreign board of 
    trade.
        The Division's potential approach describes above also assumes that 
    any foreign board of trade that would petition the Commission for an 
    order under such procedures would be a bona fide board of trade that is 
    subject to an established rulemaking structure. This view is in keeping 
    with Congressional intent with respect to what is meant by the term 
    ``foreign board of trade'' under the Act. In this regard, the 
    legislative history concerning the 1982 amendments to the Act suggests 
    that, when Congress amended the Act in 1982, it intended that the 
    exclusion of futures contracts traded on ``a board of trade, exchange 
    or market located outside the United States'' form the off-exchange ban 
    in Section 4(a) of the Act, as well as the limitation on the 
    Commission's regulatory authority in Section 4(b), apply only to ``bona 
    fide foreign futures contracts'' traded in a regulated exchange 
    environment.\47\ Consistent with Congressional intent, the Commission 
    made clear when promulgating part 30 that the part 30 rules do not 
    permit the offer and sale in the U.S. of foreign futures or options 
    that are not executed  on or subject to the rules of a foreign board of 
    trade.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \47\ See S. Rep. 384, 97th Cong., 2d Sess. 45-47, 84-
    85 (1982); H.R. Rep. No. 565, Part I, 97th Cong., 2d 
    Sess. 84-85 (1982).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    2. Order Execution and Order Routing Issues
        Technological capabilities now exist that would enable a customer, 
    who is not a member of a foreign board of trade, to send orders to the 
    foreign board of trade through an automated order routing system that 
    is linked to the board of trade through a member. Through such a 
    system, customers could place orders on the foreign board of trade with 
    little, if any, human intervention by the member. Execution of the 
    customer's order could be accomplished either through the foreign board 
    of trade's system interface or on the floor of an exchange.
        To date, the Commission has not opined on the appropriateness of an 
    FCM's use of an automated order routing system that would allow 
    customer orders that have been submitted electronically to the FCM to 
    be transmitted into a foreign board of trade computer system for 
    placing orders on the foreign board of trade.\48\ As discussed above, 
    the Division's approach does not contemplate that the Commission's 
    rules would permit customers to have access to ``computer terminals'' 
    such that they would have the functionality of a proprietary terminal 
    and could place a trade directly on a foreign board of trade without 
    the use of an intermediary. The Commission requests comment on whether 
    its rules should permit the use of some type of automated process to be 
    employed by FCMs to allow customer orders that have been submitted 
    electronically to the FCM to be transmitted into a foreign board of 
    trade computer system. If so, what features would the system have to 
    include or lack so that it would not be deemed a computer terminal 
    under Commission rules? For example, should any automated order 
    transmission system allowing a customer to transmit orders to its FCM 
    require an employee of the FCM to review and to accept such orders and 
    to take some affirmative, non-automated action to transmit such order 
    to the foreign board of trade, or should fully automated intermediation 
    be permitted, in which a fully computerized process would substitute 
    for acceptance and transmission of orders by FCM employees? Should any 
    such system limit a customer's view of information to only a portion of 
    that otherwise available to a member of a foreign board of trade that 
    has a computer terminal? If so, what types of information should be 
    permissible to be viewed by the customer on such a system and what 
    information should be inaccessible? Should automated systems be 
    required to provide, at a minimum, credit and position limit checks? 
    The Commission requests comment as to other safeguards that should be 
    required if automated verification, acceptance and transmission of 
    customer orders to a foreign board of trade's computer system is 
    permitted.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \48\ By letter to the CME dated August 14, 1997, the Division, 
    under authority delegated by the Commission in Rule 1.41a(a)(3), 
    informed the CME that its proposal to permit customers to transmit 
    Globex orders to FCMs via the Internet did not require Commission 
    approval under Section 5a(a)(12) of the Act. Under CME's proposal, 
    customers do not have direct access to Globex. Rather, the proposal 
    permits CME clearing members to accept customer orders via the 
    Internet. After receipt of a customer order, the order is 
    transmitted to Globex via the clearing member's order routing system 
    and CME's computer-to-computer interface (``CTCI''), which enables 
    clearing members to upload and download orders between the member's 
    order routing system and Globex. A CME clearing member may use CME's 
    CTCI only if (1) the member's order routing system contains 
    automated credit controls or position limits, or (2) customer orders 
    received by the member through its order routing system are subject 
    to manual review and processing by a clearing member employee prior 
    to being entered into a Globex terminal.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        If the Commission were to permit an FCM to use a fully automated 
    process to transmit electronically submitted customer orders to a 
    foreign board of trade, should the FCM's use of this process be 
    permitted only pursuant to the requirements of a Commission order to 
    the foreign board of trade? That is, should customer access through an 
    automated order routing system be provided: (1) only to a foreign board 
    of trade that had received an order from the Commission to place 
    computer terminals in the U.S. without being designated as a contract 
    market; and (2) only through an FCM that is a member or affiliate of a 
    member of such foreign board of trade and that had undergone the 
    appropriate confirmation process to operate computer terminals under 
    the foreign board of trade's order? Or should fully automated order 
    routing systems allowed to provide access to all foreign boards of 
    trade even if they have not received permission to place terminals in 
    the U.S.? How should foreign firms that operate pursuant to an 
    exemption under Commission Rule 30.10 be treated?
    3. Linkages Between Boards of Trade
        As electronic trading systems continue to evolve, some boards of 
    trade are finding it advantageous to enter into partnerships with other 
    boards of trade to make their products more widely available.\49\ These 
    partnerships raise issues regarding how a Commission rule should 
    accommodate situations where the products of one board of trade are 
    being made available through another board of trade's computer 
    terminals located in the U.S. or where two or more boards of trade 
    share the same electronic trading platform. The Division's approach, 
    described above, would apply not only with respect to a single foreign 
    board of trade, but also in circumstances where the products of 
    multiple foreign boards of trade are traded from a single system. In 
    such a
    
    [[Page 39789]]
    
    case, each foreign board of trade whose products would be made 
    available through U.S.-located computer terminals would be required to 
    comply with any requirements adopted by the Commission in its order. 
    For example, if two or more foreign boards of trade share the same 
    computer terminal platform and each wished to place computer terminals 
    in the U.S. for the use of its members (or members' affiliates), each 
    would be required to receive an order from the Commission and comply 
    with the requirements in that order under the approach described above. 
    The Division's approach would also arguably apply to a foreign board of 
    trade which trades through terminals shared with a U.S. exchange that 
    has been designated as a U.S. contract market.\50\ The Commission 
    requests comment as to whether different requirements should apply to a 
    foreign board of trade's products which are traded on the computer 
    terminals of a U.S. contract market. If so, how should such 
    requirements differ and why?
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        \49\ See, e.g., note 12, supra.
        \50\ The Commission anticipates that a foreign board of trade 
    that currently is trading its products through computer terminals in 
    the U.S. would be required to comply with any new rules eventually 
    adopted by the Commission, but would be provided a transition period 
    in which to come into compliance.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    III. Conclusion
    
        The Commission believes that it is appropriate to develop rules 
    concerning placement of foreign board of trade terminals in the U.S. in 
    light of the growing interest among foreign boards of trade to do so. 
    The Commission hopes to develop an approach to address these issues 
    that will provide certainty to foreign exchanges that wish to place 
    their computer terminals in the U.S. for trading purposes and will be 
    consistent with the Commission's obligations under the Act to maintain 
    the integrity and competitiveness of the U.S. markets and to provide 
    protection to U.S. customers. To this end, the Commission requests 
    public comment on the issues and the Division's approach, as discussed 
    above.
    
        Issued in Washington, D.C. on July 17, 1998 by the Commission.
    Jean A. Webb,
    Secretary of the Commission.
    [FR Doc. 98-19723 Filed 7-23-98; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6351-01-M
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
07/24/1998
Department:
Commodity Futures Trading Commission
Entry Type:
Proposed Rule
Action:
Request for comment.
Document Number:
98-19723
Dates:
Comments must be received on or before September 22, 1998.
Pages:
39779-39789 (11 pages)
PDF File:
98-19723.pdf
CFR: (1)
17 CFR 30