96-20691. Interpretation Regarding Use of Electronic Media by Commodity Pool Operators and Commodity Trading Advisors  

  • [Federal Register Volume 61, Number 158 (Wednesday, August 14, 1996)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 42146-42165]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 96-20691]
    
    
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    COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION
    
    17 CFR Part 4
    
    
    Interpretation Regarding Use of Electronic Media by Commodity 
    Pool Operators and Commodity Trading Advisors
    
    AGENCY: Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
    
    ACTION: Interpretation; Solicitation of comment.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (the ``Commission'' 
    or ``CFTC'') is publishing its views with respect to the use of 
    electronic media for transmission and delivery of Disclosure Documents,
    
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    reports and other information by commodity pool operators (``CPOs''), 
    commodity trading advisors (``CTAs''), and associated persons (``APs'') 
    thereof, under the Commodity Exchange Act and the Commission's rules 
    promulgated thereunder. This interpretative guidance is intended to 
    assist CPOs, CTAs and their respective APs in using electronic media to 
    comply with their disclosure and reporting obligations, and to 
    encourage continued research, development and use of electronic media 
    for such purposes. The Commission also is announcing a pilot program 
    for the electronic filing of CPO and CTA Disclosure Documents with the 
    Commission. The Commission seeks comment on the issues discussed in 
    this release and any related issues, including other areas as to which 
    the Commission could provide guidance concerning use of electronic 
    media for filing with the Commission or delivery to customers of 
    required reports.
    
    DATES: This interpretation is effective on October 15, 1996. Comments 
    should be received on or before October 15, 1996.
    
    ADDRESSES: Comments should be submitted 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.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Susan C. Ervin, Deputy Director/Chief 
    Counsel, Gary L. Goldsholle, Attorney/Advisor, Christopher W. Cummings, 
    Attorney/Advisor, or Tina Paraskevas Shea, Attorney/Advisor, Division 
    of Trading and Markets, Commodity Futures Trading Commission, 1155 21st 
    Street, N.W., Washington D.C. 20581. Telephone number: (202) 418-5450. 
    Facsimile number: (202) 418-5536. Electronic mail: tm@cftc.gov
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. Background
    
        By this release, the Commission is publishing its views with 
    respect to the use of electronic 1 media by CPOs, CTAs and their 
    respective APs,2 for transmission and delivery of Disclosure 
    Documents, reports and other information in a manner consistent with 
    the Commodity Exchange Act (the ``CEA'' or ``Act'') 3 and the 
    Commission's regulations promulgated thereunder.4
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        \1\ For purposes of this release, the term ``electronic'' media 
    refers to media such as audiotapes, videotapes, facsimiles, CD-ROM, 
    electronic mail, bulletin boards, Internet World Wide Web sites and 
    computer networks (e.g., local area networks and commercial on-line 
    services) used to provide documents and information required by or 
    otherwise affected by the Commodity Exchange Act and the regulations 
    promulgated thereunder.
        \2\ The Commission is not addressing the use of electronic media 
    by other Commission registrants, such as futures commission 
    merchants (``FCMs'') and introducing brokers (``IBs'') at this time 
    but has such issues under review.
        \3\ 7 U.S.C. 1 et seq. (1994).
        \4\ Commission rules are found at 17 CFR Ch. I (1996). The rules 
    governing the obligations of CPOs and CTAs, including rules relating 
    to disclosure and reporting, recordkeeping and advertising, are 
    found at 17 CFR Part 4 (1996).
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        The Expanding Electronic Marketplace. In recent years, personal 
    computers have gained widespread entry into the mass market.5 
    Advances in personal computers and related electronic media technology 
    have enabled large sectors of the general population to use computers 
    to access the Internet, proprietary on-line services, and multi-media 
    applications such as those stored on CD-ROMs. The use of personal 
    computers to access the Internet and proprietary on-line services has 
    been growing at a spectacular rate.6 This trend appears likely to 
    continue or even accelerate.7
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        \5\ Current estimates are that between thirty-five and thirty-
    nine percent of households in the United States possess a computer. 
    G. Christian Hill, ``Tally of Homes With PCs Increased 16% Last 
    Year,'' Wall Street Journal, May 21, 1996, at B10; ``Too Good to 
    Last,'' Economist, March 23, 1996, at 62.
        \6\ The actual number of Internet users in the United States 
    above age 16 is the focus of debate and has been estimated between 
    16.4 and 22.0 million, as of August 1995. Peter H. Lewis, ``New 
    Estimates in Old Debate on Internet Use,'' New York Times, April 17, 
    1996, at D1.
        \7\ Daniel Akst, ``Postcard from Cyberspace: Proof of 
    Skyrocketing Net Growth,'' Los Angeles Times, February 28, 1996, at 
    D4. The trend towards Internet usage appears to be so strong that 
    certain participants in the computer industry are developing 
    ``network computers,'' low cost computers whose primary purpose will 
    be to connect to the Internet. Don Clark, ``Oracle Chief to Unveil: 
    `Info Appliances,' But Will Consumers Want to Buy Them?'' Wall 
    Street Journal, May 16, 1996, at B1.
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        The growing use of electronic media is significantly affecting the 
    financial services industry. Specifically, it has caused many changes 
    in the way industry participants gather, store, and communicate 
    information. Electronic media enable private investors as well as 
    market professionals to enjoy ready access to ``real-time'' trade data 
    and financial news. Similarly, industry professionals and private 
    investors can now quickly perform complex analyses of trade and market 
    data. Both private investors and market professionals use electronic 
    mail and message boards to communicate and disseminate information.
        Within the financial services industry, a wide range of businesses, 
    both large and small, have established a presence on the World Wide Web 
    and on the Internet. For instance, many securities brokerage houses now 
    allow customers to place trades and to review account information over 
    the Internet.8 Many mutual fund companies have established sites 
    on the World Wide Web or on proprietary on-line services. These sites 
    allow potential investors to download prospectuses, transfer 
    investments among multiple mutual funds, and complete subscription 
    applications without having to wait for such materials to arrive by 
    postal mail.9
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        \8\ Estimates of the number of on-line brokerage accounts 
    indicate rapid growth. According to one source, there were 412,000 
    on-line accounts in 1994, and the number is expected to surpass 1.3 
    million by 1998. Greg Miller and Tom Petruno, ``For Investors, the 
    Internet has Promise, Perils,'' Los Angeles Times, June 4, 1996, at 
    A1, A6.
        \9\ ``Mutual Funds in Cyberspace,'' The Investment Lawyer, Vol. 
    2, No. 10, November 1995.
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        The futures industry has similarly been affected by developments in 
    electronic media. Many CTAs (including publishers of market 
    newsletters), CPOs, FCMs and IBs have established a presence on the 
    Internet, generally by operating or otherwise being listed on the World 
    Wide Web. Use of the World Wide Web and the Internet appears to be an 
    increasingly important component of the business strategies of futures 
    professionals. For the most part, these registrants currently are using 
    electronic media to supplement their traditional paper-based 
    activities. However, many registrants have expressed strong interest in 
    using electronic media to comply with various requirements of the Act 
    and Commission regulations. In particular, registrants have indicated 
    that they are interested in electronically providing Disclosure 
    Documents, obtaining acknowledgments of receipt of Disclosure 
    Documents, compiling indices of CTA and CPO performance and Disclosure 
    Documents, and filing Disclosure Documents and other materials with the 
    Commission. The rapid technological advances in computers and growth of 
    electronic media have brought the regulatory issues raised by these 
    developments to the forefront of the Commission's agenda.10
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        \10\ As Acting Chairman John E. Tull noted in March 14, 1996, in 
    testimony before the Subcommittee on Agriculture, Rural Development, 
    Food and Drug Administration and Related Agencies of the House 
    Committee on Appropriations:
        The Commission is actively working to address market 
    participants' interest in using new technologies to increase their 
    efficiency and competitiveness. These efforts include: consulting 
    with industry representatives concerning current and prospective 
    uses of the Internet for communicating with the public and with 
    other futures professionals; creating a program for monitoring 
    solicitation activity on the Internet; and developing mechanisms for 
    electronic filing of reports and other ways to facilitate innovative 
    uses of computer technology in a manner consistent with customer 
    protection.
    
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        Electronic media, most dramatically the Internet and the World Wide 
    Web, present regulators with a complex of issues that differ 
    significantly from those presented by traditional paper-based or 
    telephonic activities. The Internet allows users to reach millions of 
    people at very low cost, permitting real-time, simultaneous 
    communication by large numbers of persons, with varying degrees of 
    anonymity. Communications over the Internet can combine text, audio and 
    video. Another unique characteristic of the Internet is that 
    information posted thereon can be updated or changed instantaneously, 
    and Internet sites can be created and eliminated virtually at will. The 
    Internet also is geographically unconstrained; a party using the 
    Internet can be located anywhere, even internationally.11 As the 
    Internet's popularity has grown, so too has the volume of information 
    that can be readily accessed via so-called ``search engines.'' Finally, 
    Internet sites can be connected to other sites through hyperlinks, 
    which enable users to move readily from place to place within a website 
    or to a new website.
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        \11\ The Commission recognizes that the worldwide availability 
    of material placed on the Internet presents important issues 
    concerning the scope of the regulatory and enforcement jurisdiction 
    of individual nations. For example, solicitation materials posted on 
    the Internet by CPOs and CTAs registered with the Commission and 
    acting in compliance with Commission rules may be accessed by 
    persons in foreign jurisdictions under whose laws such a 
    solicitation may not be lawful. The International Organization of 
    Securities Commissions (``IOSCO''), an international association of 
    securities and futures regulatory and self-regulatory organizations, 
    has several initiatives underway to address these issues. In 
    particular, IOSCO is examining a number of issues, including the 
    enforcement and other regulatory challenges for securities and 
    futures regulators presented by the increasing use of public 
    computer networks. The Commission invites comment from interested 
    persons as to how the issues created by application of multiple 
    jurisdictions' laws to an international mode of communication such 
    as the Internet should be resolved.
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        A number of federal agencies, including the Securities and Exchange 
    Commission (``SEC''), have begun to formally address regulatory issues 
    presented by activities involving the Internet. In October 1995, the 
    SEC issued an interpretative release addressing electronic delivery of 
    documents such as prospectuses, annual reports to shareholders, and 
    proxy solicitation materials by issuers, third parties (such as persons 
    making tender offers or soliciting proxies) and persons acting on their 
    behalf. In that release, the SEC set forth its views on the 
    requirements and standards to be met by securities issuers and mutual 
    funds using electronic media to deliver such documents to persons who 
    consent to such delivery.12 In a subsequent release dated May 15, 
    1996, the SEC extended its guidance with respect to electronic media to 
    broker-dealers, transfer agents, investment advisers and persons acting 
    on their behalf.13 In these releases, the SEC articulated its view 
    that in most instances, ``the use of electronic media should be at 
    least an equal alternative to the use of paper-based media.'' 14
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        \12\ 60 FR 53458 (October 13, 1995). In a companion release, the 
    SEC proposed technical revisions to certain of its rules in light of 
    the interpretations proffered in the interpretative release. 60 FR 
    53468 (October 13, 1995). Much of the guidance provided in the SEC 
    interpretative release took the form of fifty-one examples of 
    particular uses of electronic media by securities professionals.
        \13\ 61 FR 24644 (May 15, 1996).
        \14\ 60 FR at 53459. On January 7, 1996, the North American 
    Securities Administrators Association, Inc. adopted a resolution 
    concerning offerings of securities over the Internet. In general, 
    this resolution encouraged states to exempt certain offerings over 
    the Internet from registration provisions and to take appropriate 
    steps to allow such offers and sales to occur subject to specified 
    conditions.
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        In addition, the SEC has indicated that, subject to certain 
    conditions, Spring Street Brewing Co. (``Spring Street'') may operate 
    Wit-Trade, an on-line bulletin board-based trading system on the World 
    Wide Web that allows individuals to buy and sell shares of Spring 
    Street stock over the Internet. Spring Street had voluntarily suspended 
    trading on Wit-Trade on March 20, 1996, apparently due to concern that 
    the system, as then structured, did not satisfy SEC 
    requirements.15 However, in a March 22, 1996, letter to Spring 
    Street, the SEC's Divisions of Corporation Finance and Market 
    Regulation expressed support for securities market innovations such as 
    Wit-Trade, which they described as ``an innovative mechanism that has 
    the potential to provide [Spring Street] shareholders with greater 
    liquidity in their investments.'' 16 However, to ensure protection 
    of public investors, the SEC also imposed several conditions upon Wit-
    Trade's resumption of trading. In order to continue its on-line trading 
    system, Wit-Trade, which is not a registered broker-dealer, was 
    required to use an independent agent to handle investor funds, to 
    supplement the information provided about Spring Street on the World 
    Wide Web in order to highlight the risks inherent in investing in 
    illiquid and speculative securities and to provide on the website a 
    transaction history, including price and volume data, to facilitate 
    informed investment decisions. Finally, the SEC stated that Spring 
    Street was required to maintain and deliver an offering circular in 
    accordance with Regulation A.17
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        \15\ See Rob Wells, ``SEC Allows Brewer to Trade Stock on 
    Internet,'' Washington Times, March 26, 1996, at 5B. The developer 
    of Spring Street Brewing Co. has created Wit Capital Corporation to 
    act as agent in the public offering of securities through the 
    Internet and to create an electronic marketplace for the shares of 
    such companies. ``Brewer That Began IPOs on Web Plans On-Line 
    Exchange,'' The Washington Post, April 3, 1996, at G1.
        \16\ Spring Street Brewing Co., SEC No-Action Letter, [Current 
    Transfer Binder] Fed. Sec. L. Rep. (CCH) para. 77,201 (April 17, 
    1996).
        \17\ 17 CFR 230.251 et seq. (1996). Regulation A is an exemption 
    from registration available to issuers that are neither Securities 
    Exchange Act of 1934 reporting companies or investment companies and 
    permits interstate offerings of up to $5 million during any twelve 
    month period, including up to $1.5 million in non-issuer resales. An 
    offering pursuant to Regulation A requires that the issuer file an 
    ``offering circular'' with the SEC.
        The SEC also noted that its regulatory authority over Wit-Trade 
    extends to some categories of Wit-Trade's users. Specifically, the 
    SEC cautioned that Spring Street should inform users of the system 
    that if they post quotations simultaneously on both the Buyer and 
    Seller Bulletin Boards, they may be considered a ``dealer'' and 
    required to register as such and comply with the requirements 
    applicable to broker-dealers under the federal securities laws. The 
    SEC also stated that any transactions facilitated through Wit-Trade 
    would be subject to the antifraud provisions of the federal 
    securities laws.
        Further, by letter dated June 21, 1996, the SEC's Divisions of 
    Market Regulation, Investment Management and Corporation Finance 
    granted approval to Real Goods Trading Corp. (``RGTC''), permitting 
    it to operate a bulletin board system on the World Wide Web whereby 
    persons may post notices regarding purchases or sales of RGTC stock 
    in light of representations that, inter alia, RGTC will not receive 
    any compensation for creating or maintaining the system and that it 
    will not receive, transfer or hold any funds or securities in 
    connection with its operation of the system. Real Goods Trading 
    Corp., 1996 SEC No-Act. Lexis 566 (June 24, 1996); Jeffrey Taylor, 
    ``SEC to Allow Firm to Run Market For Its Own Shares on the 
    Internet,'' Wall Street Journal, June 27, 1996, at B12.
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        Regulatory programs to address new commercial uses of the Internet 
    and World Wide Web have been accompanied by law enforcement actions to 
    address apparent abuses involving the use of such media. The Federal 
    Trade Commission (``FTC'') has brought several enforcement actions 
    involving fraud on the Internet. On May 29, 1996, the FTC announced 
    that it had obtained a federal court order against Fortuna Alliance, 
    L.L.C., temporarily halting an alleged pyramid scheme advertised over 
    the Internet that had taken in over $6 million.18 On June 12, 
    1996, the FTC obtained a preliminary injunction, keeping in effect the 
    identical provisions of the temporary restraining order. The FTC has 
    also established an electronic forum
    
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    intended to develop a set of voluntary principles applicable to the use 
    of consumer information in electronic media generally.19 This 
    electronic forum is presently soliciting comment from all sources, 
    including consumers, industry representatives, and privacy advocates.
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        \18\ FTC v. Fortuna Alliance, L.L.C., Civ. Docket 96-CV-799, 
    W.D. Wa. 1996.
        \19\ See FTC's website at http://www.ftc.gov/ftc/privacy.htm.
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        NASD Regulation, Inc. (``NASDR''), the self-regulatory organization 
    responsible for oversight of securities firms and professionals and 
    over-the-counter securities trading, recently issued a Notice to 
    Members addressing supervisory and other obligations related to the use 
    of electronic media.20 In that notice, NASDR explained that 
    electronic communications are subject to the same approval, 
    recordkeeping, and filing requirements as communications by other means 
    and emphasized that all communications by its members with the public 
    remain subject to the antifraud provisions of the federal securities 
    laws. Further, it explained that members must comply with the NASD's 
    suitability rule, disclose material adverse facts to customers, and 
    implement appropriate supervisory procedures to ensure that their 
    associated persons do not misuse electronic communications or engage in 
    misconduct while on-line. NASDR also solicited comment from members 
    concerning their use of electronic media and whether there is a need 
    for ``prophylactic regulatory measures.'' 21
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        \20\ NASD Notice to Members 96-50, July 1996. In a previous 
    notice, NASDR provided guidance to its members concerning the 
    regulatory implications of certain conduct occurring over various 
    electronic media, including the World Wide Web, ``bulletin boards,'' 
    electronic mail, ``chat rooms,'' and hyperlinked sites. ``Ask the 
    Analyst About Electronic Communications,'' NASD Regulatory & 
    Compliance Alert, April 1996.
        \21\ NASD Notice to Members 96-50, July 1996.
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        Regulatory Implications of New Electronic Media. Like its sister 
    agencies, the CFTC has been alert to the potential regulatory and law 
    enforcement implications of the Internet and electronic media 
    generally. For example, like businesses and other government agencies, 
    the Commission is using electronic media to increase public awareness 
    of and access to its services. The Commission initiated its website on 
    the World Wide Web on October 10, 1995. The Commission now regularly 
    provides information on its website concerning a broad range of topics, 
    including enforcement actions, opinions and orders, commitments of 
    traders reports, interpretative letters, press releases, sanctions in 
    effect and reparations proceedings (including the necessary forms to 
    institute reparations claims).22
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        \22\ The address of the site is http://www.cftc.gov. It is 
    visited by thousands of users each month.
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        In addition to its World Wide Web site, the Commission has 
    undertaken a variety of initiatives relating to the application of 
    technology and electronic media to regulated futures activities. The 
    Commission recently concluded five market automation briefings, 
    soliciting input from four exchanges and from the brokerage community, 
    through representatives of the Futures Industry Association.23 In 
    these briefings, the exchanges described the current status and planned 
    improvements to clearing, order-routing, trade tracking, surveillance 
    and automation systems. The brokerage representatives identified 
    technological enhancements, including electronic transaction 
    confirmations and recordkeeping capacity, relevant to the continuing 
    efficiency and competitiveness of United States futures markets.
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        \23\ Advisory No. 25-96 (May 13, 1996); ``Market Automation 
    Examined,'' [Current Transfer Binder] Comm. Fut. L. Rep. (CCH) 
    Report Letter No. 528 at 5 (June 7, 1996).
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        To date, the Commission has facilitated the use of electronic media 
    by providing relief from or interpretations of regulatory requirements 
    in a variety of contexts. Recently, the Division of Trading and Markets 
    issued a ``no-action'' letter and a related advisory allowing FCMs to 
    use facsimile transmissions to send daily confirmation statements to 
    certain institutional customers in fulfillment of their obligations 
    under Commission Rule 1.33(b).24 The Division of Trading and 
    Markets also has issued an advisory concerning the attestation of 
    financial reports filed electronically with a self-regulatory 
    organization.25 Pursuant to Advisory 28-96, FCMs and IBs who file 
    financial reports electronically with a self-regulatory organization 
    that operates a program for electronic filing approved by the 
    Commission, such as the Chicago Board of Trade (``CBT'') or the Chicago 
    Mercantile Exchange (``CME''), may use a personal identification number 
    (``PIN'') in lieu of a signature, which will be deemed to be the 
    equivalent of a manual signature for purposes of attestation under 
    Commission Rule 1.10(d)(4).26 The PIN, therefore, will constitute 
    a representation by the user that the information contained in the 
    financial report is true, correct and complete. The Division of Trading 
    and Markets also is encouraging the CME and the CBT to license the 
    electronic filing system developed jointly by these exchanges, and 
    currently used by their members to file financial reports 
    electronically, at reasonable cost to other markets and is evaluating 
    whether to require electronic filing for all but certified financial 
    statements. The Division of Trading and Markets also has encouraged the 
    use of electronic media to achieve greater efficiency by allowing firms 
    to directly enter certain registration filings in connection with the 
    National Futures Association (``NFA'') direct entry program.27
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        \24\ Advisory No. 22-96, [Current Transfer Binder] Comm. Fut. L. 
    Rep. (CCH) para. 26,679 (May 2, 1996). Throughout this 
    Interpretation the Commission refers to various staff interpretative 
    letters and advisories. These letters and advisories represent 
    interpretations by the Commission's staff and do not necessarily 
    represent interpretations by the Commission. The Commission intends 
    to issue a separate Federal Register release addressing electronic 
    communications and disclosures by FCMs and IBs. Prior to the 
    issuance of such a release, the Commission's Division of Trading and 
    Markets will continue to resolve issues in this area on a case-by-
    case basis.
        \25\ Advisory No. 28-96, [Current Transfer Binder] Comm. Fut. L. 
    Rep. (CCH) para. 26,711 (May 28, 1996).
        \26\ The Commission approved rules of the CME and CBT permitting 
    electronic filing of financial reports prior to issuing this 
    advisory. See CME Rule 970 (approved by the Commission on September 
    27, 1993); CBT Capital Rule 311, Appendix 4B (approved by the 
    Commission on September 21, 1993). The Commission expects to propose 
    its own rules on this subject in the near future.
        \27\ 57 FR 60799 (December 22, 1992).
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        The Commission's Division of Enforcement (``DOE'') is actively 
    monitoring activity on the Internet and proprietary on-line services. 
    The DOE investigates and prosecutes violations of the CEA by persons 
    who use electronic media, as well as any other media, to accomplish 
    such violations. For instance, the Commission recently brought an 
    action in the United States District Court for the Southern District of 
    Florida against certain persons alleging fraud in connection with the 
    solicitation and receipt of funds for the purchase and use of computer-
    generated trading systems.28 The complaint alleges that the 
    defendants in that case marketed the systems in national newspapers and 
    on the Prodigy on-line service Money Talk Bulletin Board. On October 
    16, 1995, the District Court issued an ex parte order freezing 
    defendants' assets. On October 25, 1995, the defendants, without 
    admitting or denying the allegations, consented to the entry of an 
    Order of Preliminary Injunction which, among other things, prohibited 
    them from acting as CTAs without benefit of registration.
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        \28\ CFTC v. Maseri, et al., Case No. 95-6970-Civ-Davis (S.D. 
    Fla. 1995).
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        In addition, the DOE will shortly introduce a section of the 
    Commission's website through which members of the public can provide it 
    with information regarding possible violations of the CEA
    
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    occurring on the Internet or elsewhere. This section will be an 
    important part of the DOE's and the Commission's surveillance and 
    information gathering activities over the Internet.
        The Commission's Office of Information Resources Management 
    (``OIRM'') performs ongoing assessments of the opportunities offered by 
    the use of new technology to streamline or otherwise improve the 
    effectiveness of the Commission's programs. For example, in addition to 
    implementing and maintaining the Commission's website, OIRM has 
    recently provided a firewall-protected connection between the 
    Commission's internal network and the Internet. This connection 
    provides all Commission staff with Internet electronic mail addresses, 
    thereby enabling them to receive industry inquiries electronically and 
    to respond to such inquiries more rapidly. It also provides select 
    Commission staff with full web-browsing capabilities to facilitate 
    surveillance and other information gathering activities.
        In sum, the Commission supports the use of new technologies to 
    enhance efficiency and competitiveness and believes that electronic 
    media can provide an effective alternative to traditional paper-based 
    media. The Commission encourages industry participants to consult with 
    the Commission as they develop and refine electronic media applications 
    in order to assure that transitions to electronic media occur 
    efficiently and without loss of regulatory protections.
        The Commission is issuing this release to provide guidance 
    concerning a range of issues presented by existing and contemplated 
    uses of electronic media by the managed futures industry. The release 
    addresses: the applicability of the CEA and Commission regulations to 
    the use of electronic media, including registration duties and other 
    regulatory requirements applicable to persons who use electronic media 
    to provide commodity trading advice or to solicit managed futures 
    accounts or pool participations; the criteria and requirements 
    applicable to CPOs and CTAs seeking to use electronic media for the 
    delivery of Disclosure Documents, reports and other information; and a 
    mechanism whereby CPOs and CTAs may use electronic media to file 
    Disclosure Documents with the Commission. The Commission invites 
    comment on each of these topics, and any related issues of interest to 
    futures professionals or other market users.
    
    II. Applicability of the Commodity Exchange Act and Regulations 
    Thereunder to Use of Electronic Media: Registration and Other 
    Requirements for Commodity Trading Advisors and Commodity Pool 
    Operators
    
        The advent of electronic media, such as the Internet, as common 
    modes of commercial communication has given rise to numerous questions 
    concerning the applicability of existing regulatory structures to these 
    media. Although this release is principally directed toward the use of 
    electronic media by managed futures professionals, the Commission also 
    wishes to emphasize that, as a general matter, the nature and effect of 
    a person's conduct, not the medium of communication chosen, determine 
    the applicability of the Commission's regulatory framework. 
    Consequently, persons using electronic media are subject to the same 
    statutory and regulatory requirements under the Commission's regulatory 
    framework as persons employing other modes of communication.
        This conclusion follows from the breadth of the mandates codified 
    in the CEA, as well as their express terms. The definition of CPO, for 
    example, includes ``any person engaged in a business that is of the 
    nature of an investment trust, syndicate, or similar form of 
    enterprise, and who, in connection therewith, solicits, accepts or 
    receives from others funds, securities or property, either directly or 
    through capital contributions, the sale of stock or other forms of 
    securities, or otherwise, for the purpose of trading in any commodity 
    for future delivery on or subject to the rules of any contract market * 
    * *.'' 29 Similarly, the CTA definition includes ``any person who 
    * * * for compensation or profit, engages in the business of advising 
    others, either directly or through publications, writings or electronic 
    media, as to the value of or the advisability of trading in any 
    contract of sale of a commodity for future delivery made or to be made 
    on or subject to the rules of a contract market * * *.'' 30 
    Section 4l of the Act confirms the national public interest in the 
    activities of CTAs and CPOs whose advice to and arrangements with 
    clients ``take place and are negotiated and performed by the use of the 
    mails and other means and instrumentalities of interstate commerce.'' 
    31 More generally, Section 18 of the Act directs the Commission to 
    establish and maintain, ``as part of its ongoing operations,'' research 
    and information programs to determine, inter alia, ``the feasibility of 
    trading by computer, and the expanded use of modern information system 
    technology, electronic data processing, and modern communication 
    systems by commodity exchanges, boards of trade, and by the Commission 
    itself for purposes of improving, strengthening, facilitating, or 
    regulating futures trading operations.'' 32
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        \29\ 7 U.S.C. 1a(4) (emphasis added).
        \30\ 7 U.S.C. 1a(5)(A) (emphasis added). The definition of the 
    term ``commodity trading advisor'' was amended by the Futures 
    Trading Act of 1982, Pub. L. No. 97-444, 96 Stat. 2204 in order to 
    refer expressly to ``electronic media.'' Similarly, the exclusions 
    from the CTA definition for newspaper reporters and publishers were 
    amended to add ``electronic media'' to the exclusion for print 
    media.
        \31\ 7 U.S.C. 6l (emphasis added).
        \32\ 7 U.S.C. 22 (emphasis added).
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        However, although Congress's intent that the Act should encompass 
    and accommodate new technologies is clear, market participants may 
    nevertheless benefit from guidance as to the manner in which the Act 
    and Commission rules apply in specific contexts. This release is 
    intended to facilitate the use of electronic information and 
    communications systems by Commission registrants in conducting their 
    businesses and in making required filings with the Commission. In 
    particular, this release is intended to facilitate the use of 
    electronic communication systems by clarifying the manner in which 
    Commission rules, generally written to address either oral or hardcopy 
    written communications, may be translated into the context of 
    electronic media.
        As a threshold matter, the Commission wishes to emphasize the 
    registration duties of persons using electronic media to engage in 
    activity subject to the Act and Commission regulations. The Act's 
    registration requirements for commodity professionals are a cornerstone 
    of the regulatory framework enacted by Congress. Determinations as to 
    whether a person must register, and in what capacity, require an 
    evaluation of all of the ``circumstances surrounding such person's 
    commodity-related activities.'' 33 Section 4m(1) of the Act makes 
    it unlawful for any CTA or CPO, unless excluded or exempted from 
    registration, ``to make use of the mails or any instrumentality of 
    interstate commerce in connection with his business as such commodity 
    trading advisor or commodity pool operator'' 34 without being 
    registered under the Act. Thus, the Act requires the registration of 
    persons who use any instrumentality of interstate commerce, including
    
    [[Page 42151]]
    
    electronic media, in connection with their business as a CTA or CPO.
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        \33\ 48 FR 35248, 35253 n.27 (August 3, 1983).
        \34\ 7 U.S.C. 6m(1).
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    A. Commodity Trading Advisory Activities
    
    1. Trading Advice Communicated Electronically
        The Act defines the term ``commodity trading advisor'' to include, 
    subject to specified exclusions, any person who: ``(i) for compensation 
    or profit, engages in the business of advising others, either directly 
    or through publications, writings, or electronic media, as to the value 
    of or the advisability of trading in'' futures contracts, commodity 
    options, or leverage transactions; or ``(ii) for compensation or 
    profit, and as part of a regular business, issues or promulgates 
    analyses or reports concerning any of the activities referred to in 
    clause (i).'' 35 Thus, subject to certain statutory exclusions, 
    any persons who for compensation or profit engage in the business of 
    advising others concerning trading in futures or commodity options or 
    of issuing analyses or reports concerning such trading, are deemed CTAs 
    under the Act.
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        \35\ 7 U.S.C. 1a(5)(A).
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        A threshold requirement of the CTA definition is that the trading 
    advisory activity be undertaken for ``compensation or profit.'' This 
    does not, however, require that ``the `compensation or profit' flow 
    directly from the person or persons advised * * * [i]t is sufficient 
    that the compensation or profit is to result wholly or in part from the 
    furnishing of the services specified in section [1a(5)].'' 36 
    Accordingly, this requirement has been interpreted by Commission staff 
    to include direct or indirect forms of compensation or profit received 
    by a CTA, including the attraction of new customers or maintenance of a 
    customer base.37
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        \36\ CFTC Interpretative Letter No. 75-11, [1975-1977 Transfer 
    Binder] Comm. Fut. L. Rep. (CCH) para. 20,098, at 20,763 n.6 (Office 
    of the General Counsel, Trading and Markets, September 15, 1975).
        \37\ CFTC Interpretative Letter No. 76-10, [1975-1977 Transfer 
    Binder] Comm. Fut. L. Rep. (CCH) para. 20,157 (Office of the General 
    Counsel, April 22, 1976); CFTC Interpretative Letter No. 75-6, 
    [1975-1977 Transfer Binder] Comm. Fut. L. Rep. (CCH) para. 20,093 
    (Office of the General Counsel, Trading and Markets, August 13, 
    1975). For example, Commission staff have found the ``compensation 
    or profit'' requirement of the CTA definition satisfied where a 
    CTA's customers receive commission rebates from an FCM that are then 
    credited toward payment of the CTA's commodity information service 
    subscription fees. Division of Trading and Markets Interpretative 
    Letter No. 95-51, [Current Transfer Binder] Comm. Fut. L. Rep. (CCH) 
    para. 26,420 (May 1, 1995).
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        The term ``commodity trading advice'' has been interpreted 
    expansively and includes particularized trading advice that recommends 
    specific transactions or trading methodologies as well as advice 
    concerning the ``value of or advisability'' of trading in futures or 
    commodity options. Consequently, one who advises others concerning the 
    value of using futures generally, without providing specific trading 
    recommendations, nonetheless is providing commodity trading advice. 
    Further, persons may provide commodity trading advice even though they 
    ``are neither directly or indirectly involved in the solicitation of 
    funds or trades or the trading of accounts.'' 38 For example, 
    Commission staff have found that a publication that includes general 
    information on trading in commodity interests, detailed information on 
    price forecasting and specific advice on market conditions that signal 
    when persons should trade in the futures markets provides trading 
    advice.39 Commodity trading advice may include information already 
    contained in the public domain 40 and is not limited to trading 
    ``recommendations.'' 41
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        \38\ Division of Trading and Markets Interpretative Letter No. 
    96-56, [Current Transfer Binder] Comm. Fut. L. Rep. (CCH) para. 
    ________ (July 8, 1996).
        \39\ Id.
        \40\ Unpublished letter from Andrea M. Corcoran, Director, 
    Division of Trading and Markets, dated March 14, 1990 (``even 
    assuming that information contained in the [publication] is 
    available elsewhere in the public domain, it is our opinion that the 
    CTA definition includes an enterprise which is devoted to compiling 
    advice, reports or analyses of others with respect to futures 
    markets and to publishing such data in a book such as the 
    [publication] on a regular basis'').
        \41\ Unpublished letter from Susan C. Ervin, Deputy Director/
    Chief Counsel, Division of Trading and Markets, dated March 14, 1989 
    (noting that the absence of interpretative or analytical information 
    does not exclude a person from the definition of a CTA). ``The plain 
    terms of the statute indicate * * * that Congress intended to cover 
    all types of analyses and reports * * *, not just those that advise, 
    interpret or make recommendations.'' CFTC Interpretative Letter No. 
    76-25, [1975-1977 Transfer Binder] Comm. Fut. L. Rep. (CCH) para. 
    20,239 (Office of the General Counsel, December 6, 1976). Thus, a 
    person may provide commodity trading advice despite neither 
    analyzing nor making any predictions or representations about the 
    information provided.
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        In applying the CTA definition, the Commission has recognized that 
    commodity trading advice may be provided through all forms of 
    communication, including electronic media. This conclusion is compelled 
    by the Act's express terms; as noted by Commission staff, ``[i]n 
    distinguishing between trading advice offered directly or through 
    publications, writings or electronic media, [the statutory CTA 
    definition] is clearly intended to reach `impersonal,' indirect forms 
    of trading advice and explicitly recognizes that commodity trading 
    advice may be given in forms other than personalized trading advice.'' 
    42
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        \42\ Division of Trading and Markets Interpretative Letter No. 
    95-101, [Current Transfer Binder] Comm. Fut. L. Rep. (CCH) para. 
    26,565 (November 21, 1995). The Commission has recently filed 
    complaints addressing certain forms of alleged CTA activity 
    conducted by means of electronic media. For example, the Commission 
    and the Attorney General for the State of Florida jointly filed a 
    complaint, which was later amended to include a new defendant, in 
    CFTC v. JDI Limited Inc. d/b/a Future Vision, Case No. 95-6221-Civ-
    Gonzalez (S.D. Fla.), charging defendants with, inter alia, acting 
    as unregistered CTAs and violating the antifraud provisions of the 
    Act in the marketing, sale and support of a computerized trading 
    program. Similarly, the Commission's complaint in In the Matter of 
    R&W Technical Services, Ltd., CFTC Docket No. 96-3, alleged that the 
    respondents had marketed and sold a computerized futures trading 
    system generating trading signals for transactions in various 
    financial futures contracts without being registered as CTAs. The 
    complaint also charged the parties with violations of antifraud 
    provisions of the Act by falsely advertising money-back guarantees 
    and hypothetical profits in magazines, telephone solicitations and 
    written promotional materials. The Commission expresses no opinion 
    on the merits or ultimate outcome of these cases.
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        Commission staff have applied the CTA definition to ``persons who 
    make commodity interest trading advice available to the public through 
    mass media, such as newsletters, telephone hotlines or electronic 
    devices including computer software, rather than through direct 
    communication with individual persons.'' 43 Staff letters have 
    applied the CTA definition to, for example, designers and distributors 
    of computer software programs that generated commodity trading 
    recommendations or strategies; 44 a professor who received 
    compensation for applying research and periodically updating a computer 
    model used for trading commodity interests; 45 the distributor of 
    software that analyzed a United States dollar index; 46 and the 
    licensor of a computer software program who had developed and licensed 
    to more than fifty licensees various computerized trading systems that 
    allowed the licensees to input data setting the parameters of futures 
    transactions.\47\ These staff positions are consistent with 
    applications of the CTA definition to other impersonal or indirect 
    forms of communication, such
    
    [[Page 42152]]
    
    as newsletters and other print media 48 and telephone 
    hotlines.49
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        \43\ Division of Trading and Markets Interpretative Letter No. 
    95-68, [Current Transfer Binder] Comm. Fut. L. Rep. (CCH) para. 
    26,498 (August 10, 1995).
        \44\ Id.
        \45\ Division of Trading and Markets Interpretative Letter No. 
    94-51, [1992-1994 Transfer Binder] Comm. Fut. L. Rep. (CCH) para. 
    26,115 (May 10, 1994).
        \46\ Division of Trading and Markets Interpretative Letter No. 
    93-27, [1992-1994 Transfer Binder] Comm. Fut. L. Rep. (CCH) para. 
    25,704 (April 2, 1993).
        \47\ Division of Trading and Markets Interpretative Letter No. 
    84-9, [1982-1984 Transfer Binder] Comm. Fut. L. Rep. (CCH) para. 
    22,092 (March 1 and April 6, 1984).
        \48\ Division of Trading and Markets Interpretative Letter No. 
    93-18, [1992-1994 Transfer Binder] Comm. Fut. L. Rep. (CCH) para. 
    25,694 (February 23, 1993) (publications issued on a monthly or 
    bimonthly basis which contained analyses and advice concerning 
    trading commodity interests, including gold, silver and platinum 
    contracts required registration as a CTA); CFTC Interpretative 
    Letter No. 75-3, [1975-1977 Transfer Binder] Comm. Fut. L. Rep. 
    (CCH) para. 20,090 (Office of the General Counsel, Trading and 
    Markets, July 31, 1975) (publisher of newsletter focusing on cash 
    commodity markets and that occasionally prints advice concerning the 
    use of agricultural futures for hedging purposes is a CTA); Division 
    of Trading and Markets Interpretative Letter No. 94-29, [1992-1994 
    Transfer Binder] Comm. Fut. L. Rep. (CCH) para. 26,020 (March 15, 
    1994) (responding to general questions regarding newsletter 
    publications and CTA registration and concluding that publisher of 
    newsletter offering market advice is not a CTA only if advice is 
    solely incidental to the publisher's business).
        \49\ Division of Trading and Markets Interpretative Letter No. 
    93-43, [1992-1994 Transfer Binder] Comm. Fut. L. Rep. (CCH) para. 
    25,734 (May 19, 1993) (requiring CTA registration of IB using a 
    ``900 line'' that provided prerecorded trade recommendations as well 
    as research, market and trade ideas); see also CFTC v. Ehrenberg, 
    [1982-1984 Transfer Binder] Comm. Fut. L. Rep. (CCH) para. 21,640, 
    at 26,429 (E.D. Ill. 1982) (party who advertised services as pork 
    belly trading specialist in commodities magazine and gave commodity 
    trading advice over telephone for a fee was required to register as 
    CTA).
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        The Commission wishes to make clear that the nature and scope of 
    regulation of trading advisory activity under the CEA depends upon the 
    type of activity in which the advisor engages. For example, persons who 
    provide commodity trading advice but do so in a manner that is solely 
    incidental to the conduct of certain businesses or professions, such as 
    banking, news publishing or news reporting, are wholly excluded from 
    the definition of a CTA. Persons who provide commodity trading advice 
    but do not qualify for a statutory exclusion from the CTA definition 
    due to the fact that their trading advice is not incidental to the 
    conduct of their business or profession as, e.g., a publisher, are 
    required to register as CTAs and maintain specified records; however, 
    unless they are managing customer accounts, they are not subject to the 
    requirement to deliver a Disclosure Document. Finally, persons who 
    manage customer accounts, i.e., direct or guide accounts,50 are 
    required to register with the CFTC, deliver a Disclosure Document to 
    each prospective customer at or before the time at which he solicits 
    such customer, obtain a signed acknowledgment of receipt of the 
    Disclosure Document from the customer and maintain specified books and 
    records. Persons who solicit managed accounts for a CTA must be 
    registered as an AP of the CTA and provide the required Disclosure 
    Document at the time of or prior to solicitation of the customer. The 
    Commission provides guidance on a case-by-case basis concerning the 
    application of these requirements to particular business activities or 
    arrangements.
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        \50\ Commission staff have stated that it is not necessary for a 
    person to have a power of attorney in order to be ``directing'' or 
    ``guiding'' accounts. See, e.g., Division of Trading and Markets 
    Interpretative Letter No. 86-15, [1986-1987 Transfer Binder] Comm. 
    Fut. L. Rep. (CCH) para. 23,165 (July 22, 1986) (``[i]t should be 
    noted that, although the CTA has no power of attorney over the 
    account, he does have the power to control the client's trades'').
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    a. Exclusions From the CTA Definition
        The CEA provides an exclusion from the CTA definition for banks and 
    trust companies (and their employees), news reporters, columnists and 
    editors, lawyers, accountants and teachers, floor brokers or FCMs, 
    publishers or producers of print or electronic data of general and 
    regular dissemination (and their employees), contract markets, and 
    ``such other persons not within the intent of this paragraph as the 
    Commission may specify by rule, regulation, or order.'' 51 These 
    exclusions apply only if the furnishing of such services by the 
    specified persons ``is solely incidental to the conduct of their 
    business or profession.'' 52
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        \51\ 7 U.S.C. 1a(5)(B). For instance, Commission Rule 4.14 
    exempts from CTA registration various categories of persons, 
    including certain dealers, processors, brokers or sellers in the 
    cash market for commodities; a registered AP who provides trading 
    advice solely in connection with his employment as an AP; registered 
    CPOs who provide trading advice solely to pools for which they are 
    registered; persons who are exempt from CPO registration who provide 
    trading advice solely to pools for which they are exempt from 
    registration; and certain persons who are registered as investment 
    advisers under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 or are excluded 
    from the definition of the term ``investment adviser.'' 17 CFR 4.14.
        \52\ 7 U.S.C. 1a(5)(C). Pursuant to statutory amendments adopted 
    in 1982, the Act also provides that the Commission may, ``by rule or 
    regulation, include within the term [CTA] any person advising as to 
    the value of commodities or issuing reports or analyses concerning 
    commodities if the Commission determines that the rule or regulation 
    will effectuate the purposes of this paragraph.'' 7 U.S.C. 1a(5)(D).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    (1) Publisher or Producer of Electronic Data of General and Regular 
    Dissemination
        The CEA's express exclusion from the CTA definition for publishers 
    and producers of print or electronic media applies only if two criteria 
    are met.53 First, a person must be ``the publisher or producer of 
    any print or electronic data of general and regular dissemination.'' 
    (emphasis added). Second, ``the furnishing of such services * * * [must 
    be] solely incidental to the conduct of their business or profession.'' 
    As construed by CFTC staff, the phrase ``general and regular 
    dissemination'' applies to publications whose ``primary purpose [is] to 
    disseminate news and other items appealing to the interest of all 
    segments of the business and financial community.'' 54 In 
    contrast, ``if a publication concentrates on disseminating analyses, 
    reports or recommendations bearing on a narrow area of interest, such 
    as * * * commodity futures trading,'' the staff has construed the 
    publication not to be ``a bona fide business or financial publication 
    of general and regular circulation'' for purposes of the statutory 
    exclusion from the CTA definition.55
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        \53\ 7 U.S.C. 1a(5) provides in pertinent part:
        (B) Subject to subparagraph (C), the term ``commodity trading 
    advisor'' does not include--
        *        *        *        *        *
        (iv) the publisher or producer of any print or electronic data 
    of general and regular dissemination, including its employees;
        *        *        *        *        *
        (C) INCIDENTAL SERVICES--Subparagraph (B) shall apply only if 
    the furnishing of such services by persons referred to in 
    subparagraph (B) is solely incidental to the conduct of their 
    business or profession.
        \54\ Division of Trading and Markets Interpretative Letter No. 
    76-1, [1975-1977 Transfer Binder] Comm. Fut. L. Rep. (CCH) para. 
    20,135 (February 26, 1976) (emphasis added).
        \55\ Id.
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    (2) Solely Incidental
        In defining ``solely incidental,'' the Commission does not rely on 
    a specific numerical standard or percentage of revenues or business 
    but, rather, considers the nature of the overall business and the 
    factual context in which the advisory services are rendered.56 
    Thus, ``a planned or periodic expression of views as to the 
    advisability of trading in commodity futures made by an FCM may be 
    solely incidental to its business[,] while the same advice rendered by 
    a publisher or bank may not.'' 57 Generally, if a publication has 
    a specialized focus upon futures transactions or is largely devoted to 
    futures trading, the commodity trading advice furnished therein will 
    not be considered to be solely incidental to the conduct of the
    
    [[Page 42153]]
    
    publisher's business.58 Conversely, if a publication covers a 
    broad range of topics and futures are not its predominant focus, the 
    commodity trading advice provided therein may be ``solely incidental'' 
    to the conduct of the publisher's business. For example, Commission 
    staff have found that ``reprinting'' by an electronic information 
    service of, among other things, specific trading recommendations was 
    solely incidental to its broader business as an electronic information 
    and communications service, a general computer library whose files 
    included a ``broad range of many different types of information.'' 
    59 However, advice furnished in a financial publication (and 
    related telephone newsline service) that was substantially focused on 
    metals futures, was not solely incidental to that entity's publishing 
    business, but in the words of the Commission, was ``the very point of 
    that business.'' 60 Similarly, where a newsletter devoted a 
    substantial number of issues to analyses of the futures markets and 
    specific trading recommendations, Commission staff found such advice to 
    be ``fundamental,'' rather than solely incidental, to the company's 
    business.61
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        \56\ In the Matter of Armstrong, [1992-1994 Transfer Binder] 
    Comm. Fut. L. Rep. (CCH) para. 25,657 (February 8, 1993), rev'd on 
    other grounds sub nom., Armstrong v. Commodity Futures Trading 
    Commission, [1992-1994 Transfer Binder] Comm. Fut. L. Rep. (CCH) 
    para. 25,914 (December 21, 1993) [hereinafter Armstrong]; see also 
    52 FR 41975, 41978 (November 2, 1987) (discussing ``solely 
    incidental'' as used in Commission Rule 4.6).
        \57\ Division of Trading and Markets Interpretative Letter No. 
    76-1, [1975-1977 Transfer Binder] Comm. Fut. L. Rep. (CCH) para. 
    20,135 (February 26, 1976).
        \58\ Armstrong; CFTC Interpretative Letter No 75-4, [1975-1977 
    Transfer Binder] Comm. Fut. L. Rep. (CCH) para. 20,091 (Office of 
    the General Counsel, Trading and Markets, August 11, 1975).
        \59\ Division of Trading and Markets Interpretative Letter No. 
    83-3, [1982-1984 Transfer Binder] Comm. Fut. L. Rep. (CCH) para. 
    21,842, at 27,538 (May 25, 1983) (describing the computer 
    information and communications service as ``computer library and 
    information distribution business'').
        \60\ Armstrong, at 40,149.
        \61\ CFTC Interpretative Letter No. 75-4, [1975-1977 Transfer 
    Binder] Comm. Fut. L. Rep. (CCH) para. 20,091, (Office of the 
    General Counsel, Trading and Markets, August 11, 1975). The United 
    States Supreme Court's interpretation of the term ``investment 
    adviser'' in SEC v. Lowe, 472 U.S. 181 (1985), as used in the 
    Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (``IAA''), does not mandate a 
    different result. In Lowe, after reviewing the language and 
    legislative history of the IAA, the Court held that Congress had 
    excluded publishers of generalized securities advice from the 
    definition of investment adviser. Although a ``facial parallel'' 
    exists between the Section 1a(5)(B)(iv) of the CEA and Section 
    203(c) of the IAA (the exclusion for ``the publisher of a bona fide 
    newspaper, magazine or business of financial publication of general 
    and regular circulation''), unlike the investment adviser definition 
    of the IAA, the CTA definition in Section 1a(5)(C) of the CEA limits 
    the exclusions in Section 1a(5)(B), including the publishers' 
    exclusion of Section 1a(5)(B)(iv), to cases where ``the furnishing 
    of such services by the foregoing persons is solely incidental to 
    the conduct of their business or profession.'' Armstrong, at 40,149. 
    Consequently, as the Commission noted in Armstrong, ``[g]iven this 
    clear distinction between Congress' exclusionary language in [the 
    IAA and the CEA, the Commission is] not persuaded that the holding 
    in Lowe mandates a broad construction of the exclusion from the 
    definition of CTA for certain publishers.'' Id.
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    b. Exemption From Registration for Persons Who Furnish Trading Advice 
    to Fifteen or Fewer Persons and Who Do Not Hold Themselves Out as CTAs
        Section 4m(1) of the CEA provides an exemption from registration 
    for CTAs who during the preceding twelve months have not furnished 
    trading advice to more than fifteen persons and who do not ``hold 
    [themselves] out generally to the public as a commodity trading 
    advisor.'' 62 A CTA who identifies himself as a CTA or otherwise 
    refers to his advisory services or history on a public electronic forum 
    such as portions of the Internet or a proprietary on-line service may 
    not avail himself of the exemption under Section 4m(1). Such conduct 
    constitutes ``holding out'' to the public as a CTA.63 This view is 
    consistent with the SEC's views concerning the ineligibility of 
    offerings posted on the Internet for the Regulation D safe harbor from 
    registration. As stated by the SEC, ``[t]he placing of the offering 
    materials on the Internet would not be consistent with the prohibition 
    against general solicitation or advertising in Rule 502(c) of 
    Regulation D.'' 64
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        \62\ 7 U.S.C. 6m(1).
        \63\ See examples infra, at the conclusion of this section. 
    Likewise, a CPO who advertises a pool on the Internet, e.g., by 
    identifying himself as a CPO of a pool, may not obtain an exemption 
    from registration relief under Commission Rule 4.13(a)(1), inasmuch 
    as such advertising plainly negates one of the required elements of 
    the exemption. Commission Rule 4.13(a)(1) provides an exemption from 
    registration for a CPO if, among other things, ``it does not receive 
    any compensation, directly or indirectly, for operating the pool, 
    except reimbursement for ordinary administrative expenses of 
    operating the pool;'' ``[i]t operates only one pool at a time;'' and 
    ``[n]either the person nor any other person involved with the pool 
    does any advertising in connection with the pool * * *.'' 17 CFR 
    4.13(a)(1) (emphasis added).
        \64\ 60 FR at 53464. SEC Rule 502(c) prohibits ``any form of 
    general solicitation or general advertising'' and applies to 
    Regulation D offerings pursuant to SEC Rules 505 and 506. 17 CFR 
    230.502(c). Thus, CPOs who use electronic media in a manner 
    inconsistent with Regulation D may not obtain relief pursuant to 
    Commission Rule 4.8, which is available only with respect to 
    offerings pursuant to SEC Rules 505 and 506. 17 CFR 4.8.
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    2. Directories and Compilations
        In addition to using electronic media to communicate specific 
    commodity trading advice, market participants may engage in activities 
    that implicate registration duties and other CFTC requirements by 
    operating sites on the World Wide Web that compile information about 
    other registrants or futures-related subjects. For example, many 
    locations on the Internet provide central repositories for, directories 
    of, or mechanisms to access information compiled from multiple sources. 
    Persons who compile and reprint information, whether electronically or 
    on paper media, may be subject to the Commission's registration 
    requirements notwithstanding the fact that they did not originally 
    prepare the information disseminated. The terms ``advising'' and 
    ``issues or promulgates'' are not limited to the author of such 
    materials but include the ``dissemination of another's views to third 
    persons.'' 65
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        \65\  CFTC Interpretative Letter No. 76-24, [1975-1977 Transfer 
    Binder] Comm. Fut. L. Rep. (CCH) para. 20,234 (Office of the General 
    Counsel, August 17, 1976).
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        Compilations of information may range from listings of performance 
    data for all publicly offered commodity pools, comparable to newspaper 
    listings of mutual fund returns, to narrowly focused descriptions of 
    the trading strategies and history of a single CTA. In determining 
    whether such compilations constitute either advice as to ``the value of 
    or the advisability of trading'' futures or commodity options or 
    ``analyses or reports'' concerning such trading, as well as the 
    applicability of various statutory exclusions, the Commission considers 
    all of the relevant facts and circumstances. However, to facilitate use 
    of the Internet by commodity professionals, the Commission wishes to 
    clarify the status of certain types of publications of futures-related 
    data.
        Publications that compile trading results for commodity pools 
    selected on an objective, neutral basis, e.g., all commodity pools of a 
    certain size or geographic location, could be viewed as providing 
    ``reports or analyses'' concerning futures transactions and thus as 
    within the CTA definition. To the extent that such compilations are 
    presented by a publisher of print or electronic media of ``general and 
    regular dissemination'' in a manner solely incidental to that business, 
    the publisher would qualify for the statutory exclusion from the CTA 
    definition. The publisher of a newspaper of general circulation could 
    therefore publish, in a manner incidental to that business, the 
    performance results for all commodity pools or for all publicly traded 
    commodity pools without registration as a CTA or compliance with the 
    statutory and regulatory requirements applicable thereto.
        If a compilation of performance data for publicly offered pools 
    were published by a firm that does not qualify as a publisher of data 
    of general and regular dissemination, e.g., a business devoted 
    exclusively or primarily to operating Internet sites
    
    [[Page 42154]]
    
    providing data concerning CTAs and CPOs, the statutory ``publisher'' 
    exclusion would not apply. However, the Commission believes that 
    provided such data are developed using objective, neutral criteria, 
    such as size or geographical location, and presented as such by a bona 
    fide news organization for the purpose of providing current market 
    data, registration as a CTA should not be required.66 Similarly, 
    an unbiased compilation of all registered CTAs in a given location, 
    clearly described as such and without any express or implied evaluation 
    or suggestions as to the quality of the services such persons provide, 
    may be viewed as equivalent to the telephone ``yellow pages'' 
    directory, and would not implicate the Commission's registration 
    requirements. However, compilations of selected CTAs, or of CTAs who 
    pay a fee for inclusion in a list, may not be neutrally developed 
    compilations and may, in effect, promote the services of selected CTAs. 
    If the provider of this information is compensated for or receives 
    profit from such activities, absent the applicability of a specific 
    exclusion, that person is required to register as a CTA.67 
    Moreover, even absent such compensation, the presenter of such data may 
    be soliciting discretionary accounts on behalf of one or more CTAs and 
    thus required to register as an AP of such CTA, or as a CTA.
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        \66\ The Commission stresses, however, that providing even 
    objective market or performance history data in the context of a 
    publication that has the purpose or effect of providing or marketing 
    trading advisory services would require CTA registration. Thus, a 
    newsletter published to communicate the trading advice of a 
    particular CTA or to promote a CTA ``hotline'' service and also 
    including performance data for commodity pools would implicate the 
    CTA definition, notwithstanding that such performance data are 
    objectively developed, because the publication is predominantly one 
    designed to provide trading advice. Thus, whether a particular 
    presentation constitutes trading advice depends upon the facts and 
    circumstances in which the presentation is made and the 
    representations, express or implied, made concerning the content of 
    the presentation.
        \67\ As noted above, compensation in this context does not 
    require that payment be received for the communication in question. 
    Rather, if the provider of such data profits from presenting it, 
    even indirectly, such as by promoting its own services, the 
    statutory ``compensation or profit'' standard is satisfied.
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        Compilations presented on electronic media may contain actual 
    descriptive data or simply a collection of hyperlinks. Hyperlinks, a 
    prominent feature of the World Wide Web, enable a user to connect from 
    one location or document to another, a facility without apparent 
    analogy in paper-based media. Hyperlinks consist of an address or 
    phrase which, when activated by a click of the mouse, connects the user 
    to another location on the Internet. The Commission's website, for 
    example, has hyperlinks to a number of World Wide Web sites, including 
    each of the United States contract markets. Internet directories such 
    as Yahoo and Magellan are basically organized collections of 
    hyperlinks. Hyperlinks, although fundamentally a connective mechanism 
    between websites, nonetheless can be used in such a manner as to 
    communicate advice about the value of or advisability of trading in 
    commodity interests, e.g., by labeling, describing, or otherwise 
    introducing the hyperlinked sites. This would be the case, for example, 
    where the operator of a website provides editorial comment about the 
    hyperlinks or provides a list of hyperlinks that represent a pre-
    selected, defined category of persons or services, whose attributes or 
    qualifications are thereby highlighted.68 In such a case, the 
    person providing the hyperlinks would be required to register as a CTA.
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        \68\ In this case, the hyperlink communicates the views of the 
    website operator as to the quality of the services addressed or 
    referred to at the hyperlinked site.
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        However, hyperlinks can also be used in a manner that would not 
    require a person to register as a CTA. For example, the Commission 
    believes that merely providing a list of hyperlinks that is the 
    equivalent of a telephone directory or other broad-based source of 
    ``locational'' data, without more, would not make one a CTA because 
    hyperlinks in this context do not necessarily speak ``as to the value 
    of or the advisability of trading in'' commodity interests. Similarly, 
    a website that contains a search or query function that allows visitors 
    to construct searches to obtain data responsive to certain criteria 
    they select would not be considered to be providing trading advice, 
    provided that the website merely provides the ``data library'' and the 
    search vehicle for the viewer's use.69
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        \69\ This analysis would apply without regard to the criteria 
    selected by the viewer, which could, for example, call for all pools 
    with rates of return above a specified threshold or for presentation 
    of pools in order of rates of return (e.g., high-to-low). However, a 
    website that contained this search feature, but also contained 
    evaluative or mathematical services (e.g., for the calculation of 
    relative rates of return or volatility of returns) would, however, 
    indicate a different result.
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    3. Applicability of Antifraud Provisions
        Persons using electronic media are subject to the same statutory 
    and regulatory requirements under the CEA, including the statutory and 
    regulatory antifraud prohibitions and related rules pertaining to CTAs 
    and CPOs, as those using other media. These include the antifraud 
    provisions of the CEA, including Section 4o,70 as well as the 
    provisions of Commission Rule 4.41. Rule 4.41 prohibits CPOs, CTAs, or 
    any principals thereof from advertising in a manner which employs any 
    fraudulent device or involves any transaction or course of business 
    which operates as a fraud or deceit upon any pool participant or client 
    or prospective participant or client. Rule 4.41 also bars the 
    presentation of any hypothetical or simulated performance data unless 
    it is ``prominently'' accompanied by a prescribed cautionary 
    statement.71 Both the statutory antifraud provisions and Rule 4.41 
    apply to CTAs, CPOs, and their principals, regardless of whether they 
    are exempt from registration under the CEA.72 Rule 4.41 expressly 
    applies to ``any publication, distribution or broadcast of any report, 
    letter, circular, memorandum, publication, writing, advertisement or 
    other literature or advice, including the texts of standardized oral 
    presentations and of radio, television, seminar or similar mass media 
    presentations.'' 73 The requirements of Rule 4.41 thus apply fully 
    to electronic media such as the Internet.
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        \70\ 7 U.S.C. 6o provides that no CPO, CTA, or any associated 
    persons thereof, may use ``any means or instrumentality of 
    interstate commerce, directly or indirectly--(A) to employ any 
    device, scheme or artifice to defraud any participant or client or 
    prospective client; or (B) to engage in any transaction, practice or 
    course of business which operates as a fraud or deceit upon any 
    participant or prospective client or participant.''
        \71\ 17 CFR 4.41(b); In re Armstrong, [Current Transfer Binder] 
    Comm. Fut. L. Rep (CCH) para. 26,332 (CFTC March 10, 1995), aff'd 
    sub nom. Armstrong v. CFTC, No. 95-3161 (3d Cir. January 19, 1996), 
    cert. denied, 64 U.S.L.W. 3821 (June 10, 1996). Commission Rule 
    4.41(b) requires that hypothetical or simulated performance data be 
    accompanied either by the statement specified in Rule 4.41(b)(1) or 
    a comparable statement promulgated by a registered futures 
    association. The NFA's cautionary statement can be found in NFA Rule 
    2-29.
        \72\ See 7 U.S.C. 6o; 17 CFR 4.41(c)(2).
        \73\ 17 CFR 4.41(c)(1).
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        The Commission also notes that capabilities peculiar to the 
    Internet, such as anonymity and the ability to operate through aliases 
    (e.g., electronic mail addresses, user names), that obscure a person's 
    true identity or business affiliation may be exploited in a manner that 
    operates as a fraud. For example, the use of ``testimonials'' 
    purportedly from third parties but actually created by the CTA or CPO 
    that is the subject of the ``testimonial'' would constitute a 
    fraudulent practice under statutory antifraud provisions and Rule 4.41.
    
    [[Page 42155]]
    
        The following examples are illustrative of the requirements 
    discussed above.
    
        (1) (General Internet Directory Not a CTA) Company XYZ operates 
    a website that provides a directory of hyperlinks to the World Wide 
    Web. XYZ has broad listings under such topics as Arts, Business and 
    Economy, Computer and Internet, Education, Entertainment, 
    Government, Health, News, Recreation and Sports, Reference, 
    Regional, Science, Social Science and Society and Culture. Within 
    the Business and Economy section is a subsection covering Futures 
    and Options. Among the hyperlinks in the Futures and Options 
    sections are those of a number of CTAs. XYZ does not charge CTAs for 
    listings in its directory; XYZ's revenues are derived solely from 
    advertising on its homepage. XYZ does not exercise any discretion as 
    to the inclusion of any CTA on its directory, and any CTA requesting 
    inclusion will be included; these facts are prominently disclosed. 
    XYZ provides no information about the content of the CTA sites to 
    which hyperlinks are provided. XYZ qualifies for the exclusion from 
    the definition of a CTA for a producer or publisher of information 
    of general and regular dissemination since its homepage provides 
    information across all subject matters and the information provided 
    by such links is solely incidental to its business, which is to 
    provide an index of the World Wide Web.
        (2) (Recommending or Evaluating CTAs) Company XYZ operates a 
    website that contains a list of hyperlinks to CTAs described as the 
    ``Ten Best CTAs for 1996.'' Each of the ten CTAs featured on XYZ's 
    homepage is required to pay XYZ a fixed fee. In this scenario, XYZ 
    is a CTA and is required to register as such. By making evaluative 
    representations about the featured CTAs, XYZ is providing advice 
    about the value of or advisability of trading in commodity 
    interests. Since XYZ receives a fee from each of the ten featured 
    CTAs, the compensation element of the CTA definition is satisfied. 
    Absent the availability of an exclusion from the CTA definition, XYZ 
    must register as a CTA.
        (3) In the same factual scenario as in Example (2), XYZ does not 
    receive a fee from each of the listed CTAs, but instead receives 
    revenues from various advertisers on its website. In this case too, 
    XYZ is required to register as a CTA. The profit or compensation 
    element of the CTA definition includes fees received from 
    advertisers and need not flow directly from the person or persons 
    advised or from the featured CTAs.
        (4) (Disclaimers) Same facts as Example (2) above, except that 
    XYZ also provides a disclaimer on its website that states ``All 
    materials and information provided with respect to the CTAs 
    contained herein are not intended as commodity trading advice and we 
    make no specific recommendations with respect to which CTA best 
    suits your investment needs. The information is intended to enhance 
    your futures investment decisions, not make them for you.'' Again, 
    XYZ would be required to register as a CTA. XYZ has provided trading 
    advice and cannot by disclaimer alter the reasonably anticipatable 
    effects of the information provided or the consequent registration 
    requirements under the Act.
        (5) (Providing Leads) WXY is in the business of generating leads 
    and mailing lists for third party vendors who are engaged in various 
    businesses. For a monthly fee, WXY's lead generating services are 
    open to all businesses who wish to obtain mailing lists to solicit 
    customers. WXY's website on the World Wide Web allows site visitors 
    to ``sign up'' to receive information on products and services that 
    are of particular interest to the site visitors by allowing the site 
    visitors to click on various listed categories (e.g., ``Click here 
    if you would like to receive information on computers; Click here if 
    you would like to receive information on insurance products''). One 
    of the categories allows site visitors to click on a particular 
    location if they are interested in receiving commodity trading and 
    investment information. Site visitors are asked to register in a 
    guest book which requests their name, electronic mail address, 
    street address, income and other information.
        WXY forwards to various CTAs the names of and other information 
    concerning the persons who requested information on commodity 
    trading and investments. By engaging in such activities, WXY would 
    be operating as a ``finder'' since its purpose would be to seek 
    clients on behalf of Commission registrants. WXY must therefore 
    register as an AP of the CTAs to whom it furnishes customer names, 
    or as a CTA.
        (6) (Electronic Mail to Specific Address May Not Defeat 4m(1) 
    Exemption) John Doe, a school teacher who studies the stock and 
    futures markets for his own financial benefit and trades futures 
    contracts for his own account, discusses his trades with his college 
    roommate and friend, George, and two other friends whom he has known 
    for twenty years. The three friends ask John to furnish commodity 
    trading advice to them and John agrees to act as their CTA. John is 
    not registered with the Commission in any capacity, has not 
    previously furnished commodity trading advice to any other persons, 
    and has not held himself out generally to the public as a CTA. John 
    and his three friends all have computers and electronic mail 
    addresses and all four persons use electronic mail on a regular 
    basis to communicate with one another. John's three friends agree 
    that John may provide them with commodity trading advice and other 
    information relating to their commodity accounts through electronic 
    mail to their electronic mail addresses to which only they have 
    access. John's use of an individual electronic mail address for 
    purposes of communicating commodity-related information to his three 
    friends would not in this case defeat a potential Section 4m(1) 
    exemption from CTA registration because the electronic mail 
    communication in this instance is personal and direct and is limited 
    to electronic correspondence with those three individuals.
        (7) (Placing Performance Data on a Generally Accessible Internet 
    Site Would Be Inconsistent With 4m(1) Exemption) Same facts as above 
    except John also operates a website and he posts the performance 
    data of his friends' trading accounts on his website. By placing the 
    performance data on a public electronic forum that can be readily 
    accessed by others, John would be holding himself out as a CTA and 
    thus would not satisfy one of the criteria of the Section 4m(1) 
    exemption from CTA registration.
        (8) (Providing Telephone Directory for CTAs Does Not Require 
    Registration as CTA) XYZ operates a website that contains a 
    directory which it represents to be a list of each registered CTA, 
    containing the name, address, and telephone number for each CTA. 
    Although XYZ may receive compensation from advertisers on its 
    website, XYZ is not required to register as a CTA. In this case, the 
    limited information provided on each CTA does not constitute 
    commodity trading advice. Further, by providing a complete directory 
    of all registered CTAs, and representing it as such, XYZ is making 
    clear that it is not promoting or recommending any particular CTA 
    but, rather, is providing a directory which interested persons can 
    use to contact CTAs of their choice. Further, as XYZ provides an 
    equivalent level of data for each registered CTA, it does not 
    implicitly recommend or favor one CTA over another.
        (9) (Providing Biographical and Descriptive Information on 
    Selected CTAs in a Manner That Implies Evaluation or Recommendation 
    Requires Registration as CTA) XYZ operates a website that contains a 
    directory listing each registered CTA, containing the name, address, 
    and telephone number for each CTA. Additionally, for certain CTAs, 
    XYZ provides information concerning the types of trading programs 
    they utilize and certain performance data. XYZ does not charge 
    visitors to its website for access to this information but is 
    compensated by CTAs for displaying advertisements at the top of 
    certain web pages. Under these circumstances, XYZ must register as a 
    CTA. Presentation of a compilation of biographical and descriptive 
    data on certain CTAs has the effect, whether intended or otherwise, 
    of promoting, recommending, or marketing the services provided by 
    such CTAs. This conclusion is not affected by the fact that XYZ 
    provides very basic biographical data on all CTAs, since XYZ has 
    plainly distinguished among CTAs and highlighted certain CTAs for 
    specialized attention. Moreover, XYZ is compensated for providing 
    this information. As a result, absent the applicability of a 
    specific exclusion, XYZ is required to register as a CTA.
        (10) (Compensation or Profit Includes Offer of Free Services for 
    a Limited Time) RST has created a new daily ``e-zine'' on the World 
    Wide Web that is principally devoted to commodity trading advice 
    provided by RST and promotion of RST's advisory services. To promote 
    this new e-zine, RST is offering free trial subscriptions for a 
    limited time, e.g., ninety days. After this initial trial period, 
    users must pay RST's rate of $20 per week. RST is required to 
    register as a CTA. Even though RST is offering free subscriptions to 
    all persons during its start-up period, it is nonetheless operating 
    the ``e-zine'' and providing commodity trading advice for 
    compensation or profit. As discussed above, the ``compensation or 
    profit'' element of the
    
    [[Page 42156]]
    
    CTA definition includes the attraction of new customers.
        (11) (Gratuitous Leads, Discussions in Chat Rooms) Sally Smith, 
    an accountant, frequently interacts with other persons via a 
    financial investment ``chat room'' on a major on-line service. 
    During the course of these interactions, she advises other persons 
    in the chat room concerning a recent investment she made in a 
    commodity pool. She informs others in the chat room that she is 
    exceptionally pleased with the returns on her investment and that 
    she believes that the CPO is an excellent investment manager. In 
    support of her remarks, she also provides the pool's performance 
    data. Neither the CPO, its principals or anyone involved in the 
    pool's operation is affiliated with Sally Smith or her employer. She 
    does not receive any compensation or other consideration for her 
    participation in the chat room, from the CPO, others in the chat 
    room, the site provider, or otherwise, whether directly or 
    indirectly. Sally Smith would not be required to register with the 
    Commission as her chat room activity and the information that she is 
    providing is strictly gratuitous.
        (12) (Compensated Leads, Discussions in Chat Rooms) If in the 
    same factual scenario as above in Example (11), Sally Smith is 
    compensated by the CPO for soliciting members from the chat room, 
    then Sally Smith would be required to register as an AP of the CPO.
        (13) (Use of Aliases, if Undisclosed, May Be Fraudulent) In the 
    same factual scenario as Example (11), Dave Doe, the CPO for the 
    ``Futures Pool,'' is also in the chat room. Unlike Sally Smith, Dave 
    Doe does not use his real name when communicating with others in 
    chat rooms; he uses the alias ``HonestMan.'' Under this alias, Dave 
    Doe tells others in the chat room that he has heard that the 
    ``Futures Pool'' is an ideal pool for first time investors because 
    it offers excellent performance and low fees. In response to an 
    inquiry from someone in the chat room, ``HonestMan'' also states 
    that ``he has never heard of anyone losing money who invested in the 
    Futures Pool,'' which he knows to be untrue. Dave Doe is in 
    violation of the antifraud provisions of Section 4o of the CEA and 
    Commission Rule 4.41. Additionally, Dave Doe has violated Commission 
    Rule 4.21(a) because he has solicited prospective pool participants 
    for the ``Futures Pool'' but has not delivered its Disclosure 
    Document.
        (14) (Hypothetical Performance Must Be Accompanied by Cautionary 
    Statement of Rule 4.41(b)) LMN is a registered CTA who operates a 
    website. LMN's website contains a table of contents. One of the 
    items listed is a hyperlink to ``Hypothetical Performance.'' On the 
    Hypothetical Performance section of its website, which can be 
    accessed only after a person has received a copy of LMN's Disclosure 
    Document, LMN demonstrates that based upon hypothetical performance 
    results, its trading program yields an annualized return of in 
    excess of 60 percent. LMN does not provide any statements about the 
    significance of hypothetical performance. LMN only states, in bold 
    faced type, that ``Past Performance is No Guarantee of Futures 
    Results'' and ``Futures Trading Entails Substantial Risk and May Not 
    be for Everyone.'' LMN is in violation of Commission Rule 4.41(b), 
    which requires that hypothetical or simulated performance be 
    accompanied by the legend set forth in Rule 4.41(b)(i) or prescribed 
    by the NFA pursuant to 4.41(b)(ii). In order to comply with Rule 
    4.41(b), LMN is required to post either the CFTC's or NFA's legend 
    regarding hypothetical performance on the same webpage as, and 
    presented so as to ``prominently'' accompany, the presentation of 
    the hypothetical performance. LMN also may be in violation of the 
    antifraud provisions of Section 4o the CEA.
        (15) (Editing Unfavorable Comments From Guestbook May Violate 
    Rule 4.41) ABC is a CTA who maintains as part of its website an 
    interactive guestbook on which individuals post comments or 
    questions concerning ABC's trading system. ABC, which operates the 
    website, has the ability to edit the comments received. ABC's 
    website description of the guestbook implies that any person can 
    post comments on the guestbook, both favorable or unfavorable. If 
    ABC then edits any unfavorable comments he receives without 
    indicating this fact to visitors, ABC may violate Rule 4.41. ABC 
    also may be in violation of the antifraud provisions of Section 4o 
    of the CEA.
    
    B. Solicitation Activity
    
    1. Registration
        Other types of communication by means of electronic media may 
    constitute solicitation activity, which gives rise to both registration 
    and disclosure duties. Section 4k(3) of the Act requires registration 
    as an AP of a CTA of any person associated with a CTA ``as a partner, 
    officer, employee, consultant, or agent (or any person occupying a 
    similar status or performing similar functions), in any capacity which 
    involves (i) the solicitation of a client's or prospective client's 
    discretionary account or (ii) the supervision of any person or persons 
    so engaged.'' \74\ Similarly, Section 4k(2) requires the registration 
    as APs of persons associated with a commodity pool operator ``as a 
    partner, officer, employee, consultant, or agent (or any person 
    occupying a similar status or performing similar functions), in any 
    capacity that involves (i) the solicitation of funds, securities, or 
    property for a participation in a commodity pool or (ii) the 
    supervision of any person or persons so engaged.'' \75\
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        \74\ 7 U.S.C. 6k(3).
        \75\ 7 U.S.C. 6k(2).
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        ``Solicitation'' activity has been construed by Commission staff to 
    include conduct that ``influences even indirectly the investment of 
    customer funds.'' \76\ For example, Commission staff have found that 
    initiating telephone contacts to identify persons interested in 
    receiving information about futures trading \77\ and introduction of 
    potential investors to a CPO for compensation,\78\ may constitute 
    solicitation activity requiring registration. The breadth of the media 
    encompassed by the definition of ``solicitation'' is comparable to that 
    of the underlying CTA and CPO definitions, which are written broadly to 
    reach all modes of communication and conduct. For instance, the CPO 
    definition uses several alternative formulations of the transfer of 
    consideration to the CPO, i.e., ``solicit,'' ``accept'' and ``receive'' 
    funds, securities, or property for the purpose of trading in futures 
    contracts. As stated by CFTC staff, these formulations indicate that 
    Congress ``intended to achieve the broadest possible effect--namely, to 
    cover all of the means by which a person can obtain control over pool 
    participants funds.'' \79\ Similarly, as
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        \76\ Division of Trading and Markets Interpretative Letter No. 
    90-11, [1990-1992 Transfer Binder] Comm. Fut. L. Rep. (CCH) para. 
    24,872 (June 12, 1990). In Congressional discussions occurring prior 
    to the establishment of the Commission as an independent regulatory 
    authority, the Subcommittee on Special Business Problems of the 
    Permanent Committee on Small Business noted that:
        In order to adequately protect the investing public, the 
    subcommittee feels that registration requirements and fitness checks 
    should be imposed on commodity solicitors, advisors, and all other 
    individuals who are involved either directly or indirectly in 
    influencing or advising the investment of customers' funds in 
    commodities. This would include any individuals or organizations 
    identified as influencing or actually investing funds in the 
    commodities markets.
        Subcommittee on Special Business Problems of the House Permanent 
    Select Committee on Small Business, H.R. Rep. No. 93-963, 93d Cong., 
    2d Sess. at 36-37 (1974) (emphasis added).
        \77\ See Division of Trading and Markets Interpretative Letter 
    No. 90-11, [1990-1992 Transfer Binder] Comm. Fut. L. Rep. (CCH) 
    para.  24,872 (June 12, 1990); Division of Trading and Markets 
    Interpretative Letter 90-8, [1990-1992 Transfer Binder] Comm. Fut. 
    L. Rep. (CCH) para. 24,831 (May 7, 1990). The Commission's Office of 
    the General Counsel (``OGC'') has stated that employees of a 
    registered FCM are required to register as APs if they initiate 
    customer contact by telephoning prospective customers even if their 
    responsibilities are limited to determining customer interest in 
    speaking with a registered representative or receiving promotional 
    literature and referring interested customers to a registered AP. 
    OGC concluded that the initiation of telephone contact constituted a 
    solicitation requiring registration as an AP. CFTC Interpretative 
    Letter No. 77-8, [1977-1980 Transfer Binder] Comm. Fut. L. Rep. 
    (CCH) para. 20,430 (Office of the General Counsel, May 16, 1977).
        \78\ See, e.g., Division of Trading and Markets Interpretative 
    Letter No. 90-4, [1987-1990 Transfer Binder] Comm. Fut. L. Rep. 
    (CCH) para. 24,588 (January 31, 1990)(a person who introduces a 
    potential investor to a CPO and who is compensated as a ``finder'' 
    would be soliciting on behalf of the CPO and thus required to 
    register as an AP thereof).
        \79\ CFTC Interpretative Letter No. 75-17, [1975-1977 Transfer 
    Binder] Comm. Fut. L. Rep. (CCH) para. 20,112 (Office of the General 
    Counsel, Trading and Markets, November 4, 1975).
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    [[Page 42157]]
    
    noted above, the CTA definition refers to multiple types of media, 
    including electronic media, as vehicles for providing trading advice.
        The Internet provides a medium for a potentially broad range of 
    solicitation and promotional activity, as well as for conveying trading 
    advice. Plainly, CTAs and CPOs who use electronic media to inform 
    members of the public of their futures activities are engaged in the 
    solicitation of prospective customers. Thus, most websites of CTAs and 
    CPOs on the World Wide Web are forms of solicitation. This is true even 
    if the website is limited to biographical or descriptive information, 
    for such data announces the CTA's or CPO's business to prospective 
    clientele and can reasonably be assumed to elicit the interest of 
    potential customers.
        Similarly, a website that is not operated by a CTA or CPO, but 
    which identifies potential customers for one or more CTAs or CPOs or 
    evokes potential customer interest in such CTAs or CPOs generally would 
    constitute a solicitation. For example, a website marketing the trading 
    programs of selected CTAs would constitute a solicitation on behalf of 
    such CTAs. Likewise, the operator of a website that accepts and 
    forwards to a CTA or CPO the names and addresses of potential 
    customers, and receives compensation for such referrals from the CTA or 
    CPO, would be soliciting on behalf of the CTA or CPO. Consequently, the 
    operators of such sites may be required to register as APs of the CTA 
    on whose behalf the solicitation was undertaken,80 and as an AP of 
    the CPO on whose behalf the solicitation occurs.
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        \80\ If such persons are already registered as CTAs or CPOs, 
    registration as an AP of that registration category is not required. 
    Further, the definition of an AP of a CTA includes only persons who 
    are involved in ``(i) the solicitation of a client's or prospective 
    client's discretionary account or (ii) the supervision of any person 
    or persons so engaged.'' 7 U.S.C. 6k(3). Thus, the appropriate 
    registration category for persons who solicit on behalf of CTAs who 
    do not manage accounts is that of CTA, as they are providing trading 
    advice by advising concerning or marketing the services of certain 
    CTAs.
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    2. Required Delivery of Disclosure Document
        Commission regulations require that at or before the time a CTA 
    solicits or enters into an agreement to direct or guide a customer's 
    account,81 or a CPO directly or indirectly solic its, accepts or 
    receives funds from a pool participant,82 such CTA or CPO must 
    ``deliver or cause to be delivered'' to the prospective client or pool 
    participant a Disclosure Document that conforms to the applicable 
    rules.83 The requirement to deliver a Disclosure Document attaches 
    irrespective of the medium through which solicitation occurs. 
    Consequently, a CTA or CPO soliciting prospective customers or pool 
    participants by means of electronic media must ``delive[r] or caus[e] 
    to be delivered'' a required Disclosure Document prior to such 
    solicitation by prominently providing a copy of that document at, or 
    through hyperlinks with, the same site at which the solicitation occurs 
    or by delivering a hardcopy Disclosure Document to a prospective 
    customer prior to providing access to any electronic 
    solicitation.84 Application of the delivery requirement in the 
    context of electronic media is discussed below in the following 
    section.
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        \81\ Rule 4.31(a) provides:
        No commodity trading advisor registered or required to be 
    registered under the Act may solicit a prospective client, or enter 
    into an agreement with a prospective client to direct the client's 
    commodity interest account or to guide the client's commodity 
    interest trading by means of a systematic program that recommends 
    specific transactions, unless the commodity trading advisor, at or 
    before the time it engages in the solicitation or enters into the 
    agreement (whichever is earlier), delivers or causes to be delivered 
    to the prospective client a Disclosure Document for the trading 
    program pursuant to which the trading advisor seeks to direct the 
    client's account or to guide the client's trading, containing the 
    information set forth in Secs. 4.34 and 4.35.
        17 CFR 4.31(a).
        \82\ Rule 4.21(a) provides:
        No commodity pool operator registered or required to be 
    registered under the Act may, directly or indirectly, solicit, 
    accept or receive funds, securities or other property from a 
    prospective participant in a pool that it operates or that it 
    intends to operate unless, on or before the date it engages in that 
    activity, the commodity pool operator delivers or causes to be 
    delivered to the prospective participant a Disclosure Document for 
    the pool containing the information set forth in Sec. 4.24; * * *.
        17 CFR 4.21(a).
        \83\ The Disclosure Document required to be furnished by a CTA 
    must contain the information set forth in Rules 4.34 and 4.35. The 
    Disclosure Document required to be furnished by a CPO must contain 
    the information set forth in Rules 4.24 and 4.25.
        \84\ As discussed below, CTAs and CPOs may provide an outline or 
    table of contents of the website prior to the reader receiving a 
    Disclosure Document.
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        With respect to CTAs, the requirement to deliver a Disclosure 
    Document applies only where the CTA solicits a prospective client to 
    ``direct'' or ``guide'' his account.85 The term ``direct'' as used 
    in Rule 4.31 refers ``to agreements whereby a person is authorized to 
    cause transactions to be effected for a client's commodity interest 
    account without the client's specific authorization.'' 86 Although 
    the term ``guide'' is not defined in Part 4, the Commission referred to 
    the term ``guide'' in implementing regulations requiring the delivery 
    of a Disclosure Document by CTAs.87 In that release, the 
    Commission stated that Rule 4.31 ``established disclosure requirements 
    for CTAs that seek to control clients' accounts (e.g., through managed 
    accounts) or influence clients' commodity interest trading by means of 
    a systematic advisory program (e.g., through guided accounts).'' 
    88 Thus, CTAs who solicit actual or prospective clients through 
    electronic media for purposes of directing or guiding customer accounts 
    must provide each such customer with a Disclosure Document at or before 
    the time of solicitation. CTAs who do not direct or guide customer 
    accounts, e.g., those who provide trading advice in a newsletter, would 
    not be required to provide prospective clients with a Disclosure 
    Document.
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        \85\ See discussion of managing customer accounts, supra note 
    50.
        \86\ 17 CFR 4.10(f).
        \87\ 44 FR 1918, 1923 (January 8, 1979).
        \88\ Id.
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        The following examples are illustrative of the requirements 
    discussed above.
    
        (16) (Posting Promotional Materials is a Solicitation Requiring 
    Disclosure Document Delivery) XYZ is a CTA who operates a site on 
    the World Wide Web. On its website, XYZ provides a description of 
    its principals and a brief summary of its trading strategy and the 
    types of accounts it manages. XYZ also provides its phone number and 
    electronic mail address for interested persons to contact it. XYZ 
    does not provide a copy of its Disclosure Document. In this case, 
    XYZ is violating Rule 4.31(a) because it is soliciting prospective 
    clients without delivering a Disclosure Document.89
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        \89\ Guidance regarding the manner by which CTAs and CPOs may 
    deliver Disclosure Documents by means of a website is provided in 
    the following section.
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        (17) (Posting Descriptive Performance Information or Performance 
    Data is a Solicitation Requiring Disclosure Document Delivery). JKL, 
    a registered CPO, operates a site on the World Wide Web. The website 
    provides biographical information about the principals of the CPO 
    and investment opportunities that the CPO offers, including various 
    commodity pools with differing risk parameters and performance 
    histories. JKL's website also posts summary performance information 
    for the various commodity pools. The posting of biographical and 
    investment information operates as a solicitation, as does posting 
    of summary performance data. Thus, JKL would be required to provide 
    the Disclosure Documents for its various pools to the website 
    visitors at or before the time it engages in the solicitation. JKL 
    must provide its Disclosure Documents either directly on its website 
    or by means of prominently highlighted hyperlinks from its website 
    and ensure that visitors receive the Disclosure Documents at the 
    same time as or before their viewing of other website materials, 
    i.e., the time at which the solicitation occurs. The
    
    [[Page 42158]]
    
    reader must review the Disclosure Document before being permitted 
    access to the biographical and other information. JKL also must 
    inform visitors that, in addition to reviewing the various 
    Disclosure Documents on-line, they may obtain printed copies of the 
    Disclosure Documents upon request.
        (18) Same facts as above, except JKL's website does not provide 
    a copy of JKL's Disclosure Documents or hyperlink to them. Rather, 
    following the performance data, the website provides a telephone 
    number that persons can call to request the delivery of specific 
    commodity pool Disclosure Documents. The placement of performance 
    information on a website followed by a telephone number that 
    visitors can call to request a Disclosure Document would be 
    insufficient to satisfy the requirements of Rule 4.21(a) as delivery 
    of the Disclosure Document would not accompany or precede the 
    solicitation.
        (19) (Delivering a Disclosure Document Necessary for 
    Solicitation of Prospective Pool Participants) ABC is a registered 
    CPO who operates a website on the World Wide Web. On its website, 
    ABC provides a brief description of the various commodity pools it 
    offers. ABC also provides copies of each of its Disclosure 
    Documents, in an acceptable format, which visitors to its website 
    must access from a menu of options at the beginning of its homepage, 
    before proceeding to any further information concerning one of the 
    offered commodity pools. By providing access to each of its 
    Disclosure Documents and assuring that the prospective participant 
    accessed the relevant Document before receiving any information 
    other than a brief description of the pool, ABC has complied with 
    Rule 4.21(a), which requires that at or before the time a CPO 
    solicits a prospective participant, the CPO deliver to the 
    prospective client a Disclosure Document for such commodity pool.
        (20) (Term Sheet Cannot Replace Disclosure Document) In the same 
    example as above, instead of providing the Disclosure Documents for 
    each of the pools, ABC provides a notice of intended offering and 
    statement of the terms of the intended offering (``term sheet''). 
    ABC's pools do not accept investors who are not ``accredited 
    investors,'' as defined in 17 CFR 230.501(a). Nevertheless, ABC has 
    not satisfied the criteria of Rule 4.21(a). Since ABC's term sheet 
    can be accessed by persons who are not ``accredited investors,'' ABC 
    is soliciting such persons without having provided a copy of its 
    Disclosure Document.
        (21) (Distribution of Promotional Materials Through Personal 
    Electronic Mail is a Solicitation Requiring Disclosure Document 
    Delivery) ABC is a CTA who operates a site on the World Wide Web. 
    Visitors to ABC's website, who may not have reviewed ABC's 
    Disclosure Document, are invited to give their electronic mail 
    address so that ABC can put them on its electronic mailing list. 
    Periodically, ABC sends to those persons who have provided 
    electronic mail addresses information concerning ABC's monthly 
    performance results. Use of electronic mail in this manner operates 
    as a form of solicitation. Accordingly, ABC may not send performance 
    data or comparable information to prospective clients by means of 
    electronic mail unless it has previously delivered its Disclosure 
    Document to them. Failure to deliver a Disclosure Document to 
    persons whom it solicits by electronic mail would constitute a 
    violation of Rule 4.31.
        ABC may periodically send electronic mail to prospective clients 
    after they have received a copy of its Disclosure Document for as 
    long as that Disclosure Document remains valid. If, however, ABC 
    revises its Disclosure Document to reflect changes in its trading 
    program, or the Document becomes out of date, ABC would be required 
    to cease sending electronic mail to prospective clients until after 
    it has delivered to each such client a copy of its new Disclosure 
    Document.
    
    III. Electronic Delivery of Disclosure Documents
    
        The Commission is cognizant of the potential benefits of electronic 
    communication of information among participants in the futures markets 
    generally and in the managed futures marketplace in particular. 
    Electronic technology may enhance information access by market users 
    and facilitate communication by brokers and other commodity 
    professionals. A number of CTAs and CPOs have expressed interest in 
    using electronic media to provide existing and prospective clients or 
    pool participants with Disclosure Documents and other required 
    disclosures. A central goal of this release is to provide guidance as 
    to the circumstances in which electronic media may be used for these 
    purposes.
        The Commission believes that, as a general matter, the requirements 
    that CTAs and CPOs deliver Disclosure Documents to prospective clients 
    and pool participants, respectively, may be satisfied by the use of 
    electronic media, provided appropriate measures are taken to assure 
    that the purposes of the delivery requirement are achieved. By this 
    release, the Commission is giving notice that CTAs and CPOs may use 
    electronic media in accordance with the criteria discussed below 
    90 to satisfy the Disclosure Document delivery requirement as to 
    consenting prospective customers and pool participants and to provide 
    certain related documents, as specified below. The Commission invites 
    comment on these criteria and any additional criteria that commenters 
    believe to be relevant in this context.
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        \90\ Some of these criteria have been noted by the SEC in its 
    releases on electronic media. See 61 FR 24644; 60 FR 53458.
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    A. Criteria
    
        Consistency. The Commission believes that it is important to 
    maintain consistency in the application of regulatory requirements as 
    between electronic and non-electronic media. Information conveyed 
    electronically must achieve the same objectives as paper-based 
    communications. Further, the rules applicable to such communications 
    should not favor one form of communication over another; to the extent 
    possible, they should be ``form neutral.'' The medium for providing 
    required information should be selected based upon the relative merits 
    of the two methods of communication, not the application of the 
    Commission's regulations.
        Choice/Consent. Although the Commission supports the use of 
    electronic media to enhance the speed and efficiency of communications 
    by futures professionals with market participants, it recognizes that 
    even among those persons who have access to electronic delivery, many 
    may prefer to receive information in paper form. Accordingly, a CTA or 
    CPO may use electronic delivery in lieu of traditional paper-based 
    delivery of a Disclosure Document only where the intended recipient 
    provides informed consent to receipt of the document by means of 
    electronic delivery. Similarly, informed consent also must be obtained 
    from a pool participant if a CPO plans to use electronic media to 
    deliver monthly or quarterly account statements required under Rule 
    4.22.91
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        \91\ The requirement of a manual signature on such statements 
    pursuant to Rule 4.22(h) may be satisfied if the CPO keeps a 
    manually signed copy at its place of business in accordance with 
    Rule 4.23. See Division of Trading and Markets Interpretative Letter 
    No. 93-61, [1992-1994 Transfer Binder] Comm. Fut. L. Rep. (CCH) 
    para. 25,780 (June 24, 1993) (CPO may use facsimile signature 
    pursuant to Rule 4.22(h) provided CPO retains the Account Statement 
    from which facsimile is made in accordance with Rule 4.23); cf. 
    Advisory No. 28-96 [Current Transfer Binder] Comm. Fut. L. Rep. 
    (CCH) para. 26,711 (May 28, 1996) (use of personal identification 
    number may be deemed equivalent of manual signature for purposes of 
    attestation under Commission Rule 1.10(d)(4)), supra note 25. 
    Commission regulations do not currently permit CPOs to deliver 
    Annual Reports by electronic means. However, the Commission invites 
    comment from CPOs, accounting professionals, and other interested 
    persons regarding the advisability of amending Rule 1.16 to allow 
    for certification of Annual Reports by independent public 
    accountants by means of electronic media.
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        CTAs and CPOs who intend to make electronic delivery must inform 
    potential recipients concerning: (1) the requirement that prospective 
    managed account customers and commodity pool participants receive a 
    Disclosure Document for the relevant trading program or commodity pool 
    at or prior to the time of solicitation and such other documents as the 
    CTA or CPO seeks consent to deliver by electronic media; (2) their 
    right to elect to receive the Disclosure Document (and other
    
    [[Page 42159]]
    
    specified documents to the extent consent is sought for electronic 
    delivery of other communications) in hardcopy form or by electronic 
    means; (3) the specific medium and method by which electronic delivery 
    will be made (for example, whether delivery will be limited to users of 
    a particular proprietary on-line system, will be made available on the 
    World Wide Web, or will be made as an attachment to electronic mail); 
    (4) the potential costs associated with receiving or accessing 
    electronically delivered documents, such as costs relating to on-line 
    access charges, the requirement to maintain an electronic mail account, 
    or the need to possess certain proprietary software packages (such as a 
    particular word processing program or operating system); (5) the types 
    of documents that will be delivered electronically, i.e., documents in 
    addition to the Disclosure Document, such as supplements to Disclosure 
    Documents and pool account statements, and the form in which they will 
    be delivered; and (6) the prospective customers' right to revoke their 
    consent to electronic delivery at any time and the period of time 
    during which the consent to electronic delivery will be effective, 
    absent revocation. Notification concerning at least each of these 
    factors is necessary to the receipt of informed consent from the 
    intended recipient. As informed consent must be revocable at any time, 
    if a person initially agrees to receive certain required disclosures 
    electronically, he must be permitted to revoke such consent at any 
    time, and the CTA or CPO must then provide him with disclosures in 
    hardcopy form. Potential recipients of electronic communication may 
    provide their informed consent either in writing or by electronic 
    means.
        Delivery and Access. As noted previously, Commission rules require 
    that at or before the time at which a CTA or CPO solicits a prospective 
    client or pool participant, respectively, he must deliver, or cause to 
    be delivered, the applicable Disclosure Document.92 When a person 
    delivers a document by means of postal mail or provides the document 
    personally, the recipient simultaneously has notice of the delivery of 
    the document and receives the actual document. By contrast, when a 
    person distributes a document by means of electronic media, the 
    document (a) will be available only to persons who possess the 
    necessary computer equipment and software to receive it, (b) must be 
    brought to the intended recipient's attention and (c) will be 
    accessible only to recipients who take certain actions in order to 
    access and review the document.
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        \92\ As noted by example above, a CPO may not satisfy the 
    requirements of Rule 4.21(a) by electronically posting a ``term 
    sheet.'' Rule 4.21(a) provides that ``where the prospective 
    participant is an accredited investor, as defined in 17 CFR 
    230.501(a), a notice of intended offering and statement of the terms 
    of the intended offering may be provided prior to delivery of a 
    Disclosure Document * * *.'' In posting a term sheet on a public 
    electronic forum, a CPO is soliciting all persons who are able to 
    access such term sheet, many of whom may not be ``accredited 
    investors.'' Consequently, unless a CPO restricts access to its term 
    sheet to ``accredited investors'' only, a CPO must also provide a 
    copy of its Disclosure Document in accordance with the criteria set 
    forth herein in order to comply with the requirements of Rule 
    4.21(a). In any event, to the extent that the CPO intends the 
    offering to be an exempt private offering under SEC Regulation D, 
    such CPO must comply with the solicitation and advertising 
    restrictions in SEC Rule 502(c). See 60 FR at 53463-64 (in which 
    example (20) of SEC's release indicates that placing offering 
    materials on Internet would not be consistent with prohibition 
    against general solicitation or advertising in Rule 502(c) of 
    Regulation D).
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        The prospective client or pool participant must be provided the 
    relevant Disclosure Document prior to or at the time of solicitation. 
    In general, the breadth of the term ``solicitation,'' combined with the 
    requirement to deliver a Disclosure Document at the time of or prior to 
    solicitation, significantly restricts the information that CTAs or CPOs 
    may present about their services prior to delivering a Disclosure 
    Document. As discussed above, even preliminary contacts or 
    communication of basic information may constitute a solicitation. 
    Indeed, a website operated by a CTA who simply identifies himself as 
    such may operate as a solicitation, even without other content. 
    Consequently, if for example, a CTA's Disclosure Document is presented 
    at the end of the CTA's website, or made available only at the option 
    of the reader, delivery of the Disclosure Document may occur only after 
    the solicitation has occurred, if at all. In such instances, the CTA 
    operating the website would be in violation of Commission rules with 
    respect to delivery of Disclosure Documents prior to or at the time of 
    solicitation. To facilitate the operation of websites by CTAs and CPOs 
    in a manner consistent with Commission rules and without unduly 
    burdening the use of this medium, the Commission provides the following 
    guidance.
        First, a website must provide access to the Disclosure Document 
    prior to any content other than de minimis introductory material. For 
    example, a visitor may be given a general description of the contents 
    of a website before reviewing the Disclosure Document. This may be 
    accomplished through presentation of an outline or table of contents 
    for the website, with the Disclosure Document listed as the first item 
    in the outline or table of contents. The outline or table of contents 
    may include topic headings that are neutrally stated, such as 
    ``Disclosure Document'', ``Background of CTAs'' and ``How to Contact 
    Us.'' Icons or images also may accompany such topic headings, but both 
    the topic headings and any icons or images must be presented neutrally.
        The website must be constructed so that the reader may not proceed 
    to subsequent sections of the site until he has first accessed and 
    proceeded through the Disclosure Document. Thus, if an outline or table 
    of contents is used, the only active hyperlink should be to the 
    Disclosure Document. For example, if a visitor attempts to view another 
    portion of the website, the website should inform the visitor that he 
    must first access the Disclosure Document before he will be allowed 
    elsewhere in the website. Only after a visitor has been delivered a 
    Disclosure Document and affirmed that he has reviewed it may hyperlinks 
    to other sections of the website be activated.
        Delivery of a Disclosure Document for purposes of solicitation, 
    i.e., Commission Rules 4.21(a) and 4.31(a), will be complete when the 
    recipient scrolls down to the end of the Disclosure Document and 
    confirms that he has received the Document. Many website operators 
    currently employ similar designs, for example, in requiring persons to 
    agree to a set of terms and conditions before proceeding in a website 
    or to acknowledge that they are of a certain age. This confirmation of 
    delivery is for the purpose of complying with the requirement that the 
    Disclosure Document be provided at or before the time of solicitation. 
    This confirmation, which is required in the context of electronic 
    presentations of solicitation material, is distinct from the receipt of 
    acknowledgment that is required before a prospective pool participant 
    or client may open an account pursuant to Rules 4.21(b) and 4.31(b). 
    The requirements for obtaining a receipt of acknowledgment under Rules 
    4.21(b) and 4.31(b) are discussed below in the acknowledgment section.
        Websites that contain multiple trading programs or commodity pools 
    may contain a separate Disclosure Document for each such program or 
    pool. CTAs or CPOs, however, are not required to deliver a Disclosure 
    Document for every trading program or commodity pool before allowing a 
    potential client or pool participant access to all portions of a 
    website. Rather, a CTA or CPO may
    
    [[Page 42160]]
    
    allow a prospective investor to select a particular trading program or 
    commodity pool, and following delivery of the Disclosure Document for 
    such program or pool, the prospective investor may access general 
    information or material specific to such program or pool. CTAs or CPOs 
    who operate several trading programs or commodity pools must ensure 
    that there is no solicitation on behalf of programs or pools for which 
    a Disclosure Document has not been delivered and reviewed. For example, 
    a CPO who delivers a prospective pool participant a Disclosure Document 
    for ``Pool A'' must not allow such prospective pool participant to 
    access materials on his website pertaining to ``Pool B.''
        Commission rules require that a CPO or CTA deliver a particular 
    Disclosure Document only once; consequently, with respect to ``repeat 
    visitors,'' separate delivery is not required for subsequent 
    solicitations for the same pool or trading program so long as the 
    Disclosure Document has not changed or expired. Thus, CTAs and CPOs may 
    design websites systems that allow ``repeat visitors'' who have already 
    reviewed a Disclosure Document to bypass the requirement to receive 
    that Disclosure Document again. For example, a prospective investor, 
    after receiving the required Disclosure Document(s), may be given a 
    password or PIN to enter at the beginning of a CTA's or CPO's homepage 
    to allow him to bypass the consent and Disclosure Document delivery 
    portions of the website for the trading program(s) or pool(s) for which 
    he has already recieved a Disclosure Document. However, in order to 
    comply with Commission Rules 4.26 and 4.36, the password or PIN must 
    expire once the CPO or CTA amends his Disclosure Document(s) or the 
    effective period of the Disclosure Documents expires.
        Documents can be delivered electronically in a variety of ways; 
    some of these methods require very little effort on the part of the 
    recipient, whereas others demand substantial computer expertise or 
    lengthy download times.93 The Commission believes that delivery 
    should be made in a manner that is not unduly burdensome to the 
    recipient of the document. In cases where information is unduly 
    burdensome to access, the Commission will deem such delivery to be 
    ineffective unless the party making delivery can demonstrate that the 
    recipient actually accessed the document. In the case of a Disclosure 
    Document, an acknowledgment of receipt, provided that it is fully 
    informed and voluntary, should suffice for this purpose.
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        \93\ Certain methods of delivery require relatively little 
    sophistication on the part of the user. For instance, the content of 
    a site on the World Wide Web can be accessed simply by entering that 
    address into a ``web browser'' program. Similarly, the contents of 
    an electronic mail message are viewed simply by reading the 
    electronic mail screen or by viewing an attachment to electronic 
    mail that is formatted for a widely available word processing 
    program. On the other hand, where a party must download a file and 
    also a program to decode that file (e.g., ``unzip'' programs), it is 
    less certain that such party will ultimately be able to access the 
    document. In raising this concern, the Commission does not 
    necessarily intend to preclude any particular types of electronic 
    transfer but, instead, is seeking to ensure that the recipient is 
    able to access the information communicated without substantial 
    burden.
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        However, electronic media present special concerns with respect to 
    access because an acknowledgment of receipt in this context does not 
    evidence the ability to access the document over time. The Commission 
    believes that the recipient of electronically delivered documents 
    should be able to have repeated access to the document following 
    delivery. Such accessibility should be comparable to that of a paper 
    document that can be read and re-read over time.94 The ability to 
    re-read a document, such as a Disclosure Document, is often necessary 
    to a careful evaluation of the risks and benefits of a particular 
    investment or a meaningful comparison of Disclosure Documents of 
    different pools or trading programs. Accordingly, in order for the 
    electronic delivery of Disclosure Documents to satisfy the Commission's 
    requirements, the recipient must be able to access the document upon 
    receipt and continually thereafter. If the method of electronic 
    delivery of a Disclosure Document requires the reader to download a 
    file to a permanent storage device (such as a hard drive) and to 
    confirm that he has done so, the accessibility concern may be 
    addressed. However, in other circumstances, such as where a Disclosure 
    Document is not downloaded, the Commission believes that accessibility 
    of the Disclosure Document to the prospective (or actual) CTA client or 
    commodity pool participant for a period of nine months after the 
    solicitation occurs would be sufficient but requests comment on this 
    issue.
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        \94\ For example, a ``one-time'' or ``live'' broadcast over the 
    Internet generally does not allow a recipient repeated access to the 
    information. In the absence of adequate evidence that the intended 
    recipient actually recorded or stored the information, this method 
    of presentation would not satisfy the access concerns identified 
    above.
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        Acknowledgments. The requirement to deliver a Disclosure Document 
    is only part of a CTA's or CPO's obligation. Before a CTA may enter 
    into an agreement with a prospective client to direct or guide his 
    account, or before a CPO may accept or receive funds, securities or 
    property from a prospective pool participant, such CTA or CPO must 
    receive a signed and dated acknowledgment from the prospective client 
    or pool participant confirming receipt of the Disclosure Document for 
    the trading program or pool, respectively.95 A CPO or CTA may not 
    rely solely on the fact that a prospective investor may have visited 
    the Disclosure Document while reviewing a CPO's or CTA's homepage or 
    consented to receive a Disclosure Document by electronic media.96 
    The signed and dated acknowledgment is a certification by the 
    prospective investor that he has received the required Disclosure 
    Document and is among the items required to be kept by CPOs and CTAs 
    under the Part 4 recordkeeping requirements.97
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        \95\ See Rule 4.31(b) and Rule 4.21(b) for CTAs and CPOs, 
    respectively.
        \96\ As noted previously, the requirement of a signed 
    acknowledgment of receipt is distinct from that of delivery, i.e., 
    an adequate delivery mechanism may be implemented without receipt of 
    a signed acknowledgment of receipt. In the recent revisions to Part 
    4, 60 FR 38146 (July 25, 1995), the Commission confirmed the 
    importance of the requirement that the prospective investor 
    separately acknowledge receipt of the required Disclosure Document 
    but commented that ``an acknowledgment may be included in the 
    subscription documents for a pool, provided that the text of the 
    acknowledgment is prominently captioned and distinguished from the 
    subscription agreement and that there is a separate line for the 
    acknowledgment signature and date thereof.'' 60 FR at 38181.
        \97\ See Commission Rules 4.23(a)(3) and 4.33(a)(2), 
    respectively.
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        The Commission supports the use of electronic media to obtain 
    customer acknowledgments but believes that measures must be taken to 
    assure an adequate level of verification of the authenticity of such 
    acknowledgments. Requiring the reader to send an electronic mail 
    message or click on an ``acknowledgment button'' on a website would 
    not, without more, be sufficient for this purpose. As discussed above, 
    the Division of Trading and Markets has permitted the use of a personal 
    identification number (``PIN'') to represent a manual signature for the 
    transmission of certain financial reports in which a manual signature 
    normally is required.98 The use of a PIN serves two important 
    objectives. First, it enables the recipient, to the extent practicable, 
    to verify the identity of the person sending the electronic 
    communication. If an electronic transmission is
    
    [[Page 42161]]
    
    accompanied by a unique and valid PIN, and the recipient knows the 
    identity of the person who requested and received such PIN, it then may 
    confirm the identity of the sender of such message. Second, use of PINs 
    helps to protect innocent persons from false claims that they have sent 
    a particular electronic communication. If a message is sent by one 
    person claiming to be another, the failure to include the valid PIN 
    assigned to such person would render the message invalid. Although the 
    Commission invites comments from interested parties generally on 
    methods to assure the validity of electronic acknowledgments, it 
    believes that a PIN system similar to that used by FCMs for the filing 
    of financial reports with certain self-regulatory organizations would 
    provide an acceptable form of obtaining acknowledgments of receipt of 
    Disclosure Documents. Under Rules 4.21(b) and 4.31(b), CPOs and CTAs 
    bear the burden of obtaining a valid acknowledgment of receipt from 
    prospective pool participants and clients; they are thus responsible 
    for establishing procedures adequate to establish the authenticity of 
    electronic acknowledgments and to preserve records thereof. Currently, 
    in light of this concern, if a CTA or CPO wishes to establish a system 
    for the electronic acknowledgement of receipt of a Disclosure Document, 
    it must create a procedure by which the prospective client or pool 
    participant requests and receives by means of electronic or postal mail 
    an individualized PIN from the CPO or CTA. Once a person receives a 
    PIN, he may then use that PIN in lieu of a manual signature to 
    authenticate the acknowledgment of receipt.99 The mechanics of 
    using a PIN signature are illustrated by example below. The Commission 
    welcomes comment concerning other procedures for electronic 
    acknowledgment that are consistent with the objectives stated above.
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        \98\ Advisory No. 28-96, [Current Transfer Binder] Comm. Fut. L. 
    Rep. (CCH) para. 26,711 (May 28, 1996), discussed supra note 25.
        \99\ The Commission notes that various states have established 
    or are developing requirements for ``digital signatures.'' See, 
    e.g., ``Utah Digital Signature Act,'' Utah Code Ann. 46-3-101 et 
    seq. (1995). To the extent that a particular state recognizes as 
    valid only certain digital signatures, it is the responsibility of 
    the registrant to ensure compliance with such rules in order to 
    comply with state law requirements.
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        Of course, CTAs or CPOs, even those providing a Disclosure Document 
    by electronic media, are not required to obtain acknowledgments of 
    receipt electronically. A CTA or CPO may require that the prospective 
    client or pool participant provide a signed and dated paper 
    acknowledgment by mail or facsimile, although the acknowledgment form 
    may be sent to prospective investors by mail, facsimile, or through the 
    Internet.
        Format. The Commission's rules contain a number of specific format 
    requirements relevant to Disclosure Documents, reflecting the 
    Commission's determination that certain information should be accorded 
    special prominence in the Disclosure Document. Parameters for the order 
    of presentation ensure that certain key information is presented first, 
    that important disclosures are not minimized or relegated to the end of 
    the document, and that information of lesser relevance is placed after 
    matters of greater importance. The prescribed order also facilitates 
    the comparison of documents by maintaining the same sequence of topics 
    across documents of different registrants. For example, Rules 4.24, 
    4.25, 4.34 and 4.35 include specifications as to the placement in 
    Disclosure Documents of required risk disclosure and cautionary 
    statements, tables of contents, and supplemental information, as well 
    as the sequence of various past performance records.100 In 
    addition, certain items are required to be set forth in capital letters 
    and bold-face type, certain information is required to be accompanied 
    by cautionary legends or disclaimers, and in some contexts, page number 
    cross-references are required.101
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        \100\ See Rules 4.24(a) through (d), 4.24(v), 4.25(a)(2) and 
    (3), 4.34(a) through (d), 4.34(n) and 4.35(a)(2).
        \101\ See Rules 4.24 (a) and (b), 4.25 (a)(9) and (c), 4.34 (a) 
    and (b), 4.35 (a)(8) and (b) and 4.41(b)(1).
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        Where Commission rules specify the prominence, location, or other 
    attributes of the information required to be delivered, any acceptable 
    electronic presentation of such information used to satisfy Commission 
    rules must present the information in the same format and order as 
    specified in Commission rules and must reflect (if it does not actually 
    replicate) the differences in emphasis and prominence that would exist 
    in the paper document.102 Further, the addition of any audio, 
    video or graphic material, whether included as separate sections or as 
    enhancements or overlays to written text, must be consistent with the 
    requirements of Commission rules regarding the order of presentation 
    and the relative prominence of information.103 Such material would 
    constitute ``supplemental information'' 104 and thus must be 
    presented in the Disclosure Document in accordance with Rules 4.24(v) 
    and 4.34(n).105 Such material may not be presented in a manner 
    that obscures or diminishes the prominence of any required disclosures. 
    If one version of a document contains audio, video, graphic or other 
    material that cannot be included in another version, e.g., if the 
    electronic version of a Disclosure Document has an audio narration, 
    such material must be reproduced in the medium of the version that does 
    not actually contain the material.106
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        \102\ For example, where text is required to be presented in 
    bold-face type, acceptable on-screen presentation could be 
    accomplished by changing the color or shading of the text and/or the 
    background in a prominent manner. In addition, information such as 
    the break-even point per unit of initial investment must be 
    presented in the forepart of the Disclosure Document and the Risk 
    Disclosure Statement, which must appear immediately following 
    disclosures required to be on the cover of the Disclosure Document, 
    must highlight the page (or highlight the link) where the break-even 
    point is presented. If the document is not paginated, a registrant 
    may use hyperlinks in lieu of page numbers.
        \103\ For example, Rule 4.25(a)(3)(ii) requires that performance 
    results for pools of a different class from the offered pool be 
    presented ``less prominently'' than the performance of pools of the 
    same class. Audio, video or graphic devices may not be used in a 
    manner that is inconsistent with this requirement. Similarly, an 
    audio voice-over that asks a prospective client to turn directly to 
    the CTA's performance tables, bypassing the cautionary and risk 
    disclosure statements and the forepart information required by Rule 
    4.34 (a), (b) and (d), is not permitted.
        \104\ ``Supplemental information'' refers to ``information not 
    specifically called for by Commission rules or federal or state 
    securities laws or regulations.'' 60 FR at 38150.
        \105\ Rules 4.24(v) and 4.34(n) specify that supplemental 
    performance information (not including proprietary, hypothetical, 
    extracted, pro forma or simulated trading results) must be placed 
    after all required performance information in the Disclosure 
    Document and that supplemental non-performance information relating 
    to a required disclosure may be included with the related required 
    disclosure. Other supplemental information may be included only 
    after all required disclosures. 17 CFR 4.24(v) and 4.34(n). Rules 
    4.24(v) and 4.34(n) also provide that supplemental information may 
    not be misleading in content or presentation or inconsistent with 
    the required disclosures and is subject to the antifraud provisions 
    of the Act and Commission and NFA rules.
        \106\ Commission Rules 4.26(d) and 4.36(d) require that a CPO or 
    CTA, respectively, file a Disclosure Document with the Commission 
    prior to its use. To the extent that a Disclosure Document contains 
    any audio, video, or graphic material, the CPO or CTA must file that 
    version as well as any paper version. CPOs and CTAs who are required 
    to file a Disclosure Document that contains audio, video, or graphic 
    portions should contact the Division of Trading and Markets to 
    establish a method whereby the Commission may receive such 
    documents.
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        Modifications. Commission Rules 4.26 and 4.36 require that 
    Disclosure Documents be used for no more than nine months and that 
    performance information included therein be current as of a date not 
    more than three months prior to the date of the Disclosure Document. 
    Additionally, if at any time the Disclosure Document becomes materially 
    inaccurate or incomplete, the registrant must correct the defect and 
    distribute the correction to, in the case
    
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    of a CPO, all existing pool participants and previously solicited pool 
    participants prior to accepting or receiving funds from such 
    prospective participants,107 and in the case of a CTA, all 
    existing clients in the trading program and each previously solicited 
    client for the trading program prior to entering into an agreement to 
    manage such prospective client's account.108 For persons who have 
    consented to receive such information electronically, registrants may 
    provide amendments and updates in the same manner, provided that such 
    recipients' consent to the use of electronic media extends to 
    amendments and updates.
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        \107\ 17 CFR 4.26(c)(1).
        \108\ 17 CFR 4.36(c)(1).
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        One of the salient features of electronic media is the ability to 
    modify or update information more simply and more frequently than in a 
    paper environment. On the Internet, many financial service providers 
    update their performance on a daily basis, a practical impossibility 
    using conventional postal mail.109 The Commission believes that 
    the greater timeliness of information that electronic media is capable 
    of providing is an important benefit. Certainly, therefore, information 
    contained in electronic form can be expected to be at least as current 
    as that in paper form. Consequently, where a registrant employs 
    electronic and paper media, the electronic version of any publicly 
    disseminated document must be at least as current as any paper-based 
    version. If registrants elect to update their performance more 
    frequently than is required, any such performance history must be 
    calculated and presented in accordance with Commission rules.
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        \109\ Indeed, by the time the recipient received such updated 
    information, it would already be out of date.
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        Record Retention. Another important area of regulatory concern in 
    the context of electronic media is that of recordkeeping, as provided 
    by Commission Rules 4.23 and 4.33.110 These rules require that 
    CPOs and CTAs keep, among other records, ``the original or a copy of 
    each report, letter, circular, memorandum, publication, writing, 
    advertisement or other literature or advice (including the texts of 
    standardized oral presentations and of radio, television, seminar or 
    similar mass media presentations) distributed or caused to be delivered 
    * * * showing the first date of distribution or receipt if not 
    otherwise shown on the document.'' 111 The Commission's Part 4 
    recordkeeping requirements thus extend to the contents of CTA and CPO 
    websites and related electronic mail messages. The Commission's rules 
    concerning the use of electronic media for recordkeeping, e.g., optical 
    disk or CD-ROM storage, permit storage of computer generated records in 
    ASCII or EBCDIC format only.112 These formats generally do not 
    allow storage of paper records or electronic images, such as webpages, 
    since such records or images are normally not written in ASCII or 
    EBCDIC format. Therefore, these records would be required to be 
    retained in hardcopy form. The Commission invites interested parties to 
    comment concerning whether these rules, and in particular, Rule 1.31, 
    are sufficient to address record retention in the current electronic 
    environment.
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        \110\ For instance, Rule 4.23(a)(9) provides that a CPO must 
    keep:
        The original or a copy of each report, letter, circular, 
    memorandum, publication, writing, advertisement or other literature 
    or advice (including the texts of standardized oral presentations 
    and of radio, television, seminar or similar mass media 
    presentations) distributed or caused to be distributed by the 
    commodity pool operator to any existing or prospective pool 
    participant or received by the pool operator from any commodity 
    trading advisor of the pool, showing the first date of distribution 
    or receipt if not otherwise shown on the document.
        Analogous requirements for CTAs are found in Rule 4.33(a)(7).
        \111\ Commission Rules 4.23(a)(9) and 4.33(a)(7).
        \112\ 17 CFR 1.31(d). See 58 FR 27458, 27462-63 (May 10, 1993).
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        The following examples are illustrative of the requirements 
    discussed above.
    
        (22) (Hyperlink to Disclosure Document From Homepage Satisfies 
    Delivery Obligation) RST is a CTA who operates a site on the World 
    Wide Web. RST provides copies of its Disclosure Documents, in an 
    acceptable format, which visitors to its website can access from a 
    menu of options at the beginning of its website. Before the visitor 
    may access data on the website other than the menu or table of 
    contents, such as a description of RST's principals and summaries of 
    its trading programs, performance data, or other matters, visitors 
    must select and view a Disclosure Document for the trading 
    program(s) in which they are interested. By providing access to each 
    of these Disclosure Documents and assuring that the visitor has 
    reviewed the Disclosure Document prior to proceeding, RST has 
    complied with Rule 4.31(a), which requires that at or before the 
    time a CTA solicits a prospective client, the CTA deliver to the 
    prospective client a Disclosure Document for the trading program 
    pursuant to which the CTA will direct or guide the account.
        (23) (Obtaining Informed Consent) GHJ is a CTA with a site on 
    the World Wide Web. On the first page of GHJ's website, and before 
    any solicitation materials are presented, is a page requesting 
    informed consent from visitors to receive GHJ's Disclosure Document 
    by electronic means. This page informs visitors that: (a) 
    prospective managed account clients must receive a Disclosure 
    Document; (b) they can receive the Disclosure Document in hardcopy 
    if they prefer; (c) the electronic version of the Disclosure 
    Document will be contained in a portion of GHJ's website; (d) 
    persons accessing the electronic version of the Disclosure Document 
    may incur charges relating to on-line access fees; (e) the original 
    Disclosure Document as well as any amendments thereto will be 
    provided on the website; and (f) visitors have the right to revoke 
    their consent to receive electronic delivery at any time. At the 
    bottom of the webpage is a button for visitors to ``click'' if they 
    consent to receive electronic delivery of GHJ's Disclosure Document 
    and any amendments thereto. If a visitor ``clicks'' on the 
    acknowledgment button, he is hyperlinked to a copy of GHJ's 
    Disclosure Document. If a visitor ``clicks'' on a button signifying 
    that he does not provide his consent to receive a Disclosure 
    Document by electronic means, he is then hyperlinked to a form 
    asking for his name and postal address, which will be used to send a 
    hardcopy Disclosure Document through postal mail and is not allowed 
    to view any other portions of the website. GHJ's website properly 
    obtains informed consent from visitors. Before engaging in any 
    solicitation activity, GHJ obtains informed consent to deliver the 
    Disclosure Document electronically. Then, immediately upon receipt 
    of such consent, visitors are delivered the Disclosure Document. 
    Once a visitor scrolls down to the end of the Disclosure Document 
    and acknowledges that he has received the Disclosure Document, he 
    may view other data on the site. However, before the visitor may 
    open a managed account with GHJ, an acknowledgment of receipt of the 
    Disclosure Document in accordance with Rule 4.31(b) must be 
    obtained, either electronically (see example 25 below) or in 
    hardcopy.
        (24) (Registrant May Require Acknowledgment to be Returned by 
    Postal Mail) X, a registered CTA, has established a site on the 
    World Wide Web. After users review X's Disclosure Document, they may 
    access other portions of X's website. In the section dealing with 
    opening an account, users are informed that before a trading account 
    may be opened with X, a prospective client must download X's 
    Disclosure Document and return a signed acknowledgment of receipt 
    thereof. On X's website is a form receipt of acknowledgment, with a 
    statement informing the user that the acknowledgment must be 
    printed, and signed, dated and returned to X by postal mail before X 
    will open an account for the user. Receipt of such an acknowledgment 
    would comply with Rule 4.31(b). Registrants are permitted to 
    distribute Disclosure Documents to prospective clients 
    electronically and may obtain acknowledgments of receipt 
    electronically. However, they are not required to do so. A CTA 
    operating a site on the World Wide Web may require that 
    acknowledgments be signed, dated and returned by postal mail.
        (25) (Acknowledgments May Be Signed Electronically With a 
    Personal Identification Number) LMN, a registered CTA, operates a
    
    [[Page 42163]]
    
    site on the World Wide Web. LMN's website permits prospective 
    clients to acknowledge receipt of its Disclosure Document by 
    electronic media. Jill Doe visits LMN's website and wishes to open a 
    managed futures account. LMN's website instructs Jill Doe that in 
    order for her to acknowledge receipt of its Disclosure Document, she 
    must receive a PIN. LMN's website asks Jill Doe to provide her 
    electronic mail address, to which a PIN may be sent. Upon receipt of 
    Jill Doe's electronic mail address, LMN then sends her a PIN. Jill 
    Doe may then use that PIN in lieu of a manual signature required 
    under Commission Rule 4.31(b).
        (26) (Consent To Receive Monthly Statements Electronically Can 
    Be Withdrawn) JKL is the registered CPO of the Fund. John Smith and 
    Jane Doe are both participants in the Fund. In September, JKL sends 
    a notice to participants indicating that it will be sending monthly 
    account statements to participants via electronic mail through the 
    Internet, as Microsoft Word documents. JKL informs all pool 
    participants that persons wishing to receive monthly account 
    statements by means of electronic mail may incur costs relating to 
    on-line access time, maintaining an electronic mail account, and 
    owning a licensed copy of Microsoft Word. Further, JKL informs pool 
    participants that electronic delivery of the monthly account 
    statements will begin in January 1997. At the bottom of the notice 
    is a form for participants to complete if they are interested in 
    receiving monthly account statements electronically. The form asks 
    for the participant's electronic mail address and for the 
    participant's signature agreeing to the conditions of the electronic 
    delivery.
        John Smith and Jane Doe complete the form and mail it back to 
    JKL in November. In December, John Smith decides that he prefers to 
    receive monthly account statements by means of postal mail and 
    notifies JKL that he no longer agrees to electronic delivery. In 
    January, JKL can send monthly account statements to Jane Doe by 
    means of electronic mail but must send such statements to John Smith 
    by means of postal mail. The requirements for manual signatures 
    under 4.22(h) for these reports will be satisfied if JKL keeps such 
    signed reports in paper form at its place of business.
        (27) (Registrant Must Abide by Parameters of Consent) In the 
    same example as above, JKL now decides to post its monthly account 
    statements on its World Wide Web homepage. JKL sends electronic mail 
    to Jane Doe informing her that the monthly account statement can be 
    accessed on JKL's homepage on the World Wide Web. This form of 
    delivery would not satisfy the requirements of Rule 4.22. Jane Doe 
    has only consented to receive monthly account statements as 
    Microsoft Word attachments to Internet electronic mail. If JKL 
    changes its method of electronic delivery, it must again obtain 
    informed consent from pool participants. Jane Doe's consent to 
    receive monthly account statements was limited to the means 
    specified in the September notice. JKL cannot assume that Jane Doe 
    has access to the World Wide Web or that she will agree to receive 
    her monthly account statements by viewing them on JKL's homepage.
        (28) (Use of Hyperlinks in Table of Contents Acceptable) WXY, a 
    CPO, posts her Disclosure Document on the World Wide Web. As it 
    appears on the World Wide Web, the Disclosure Document is without 
    any ``pages;'' instead it is a continuous stream of HTML text, which 
    contains all of the required disclosures. In lieu of page numbers as 
    contemplated by Rule 4.24, WXY has placed in the table of contents a 
    series of hyperlinks, i.e., subject headings which trigger access to 
    the various sections of the Disclosure Document. In addition, in the 
    Risk Disclosure statement, where page numbers are required for the 
    discussion of expenses, break-even point and principal risk factors, 
    WXY has provided hyperlinks to those sections. This would comply 
    with the format requirements of Rule 4.24. Where a Disclosure 
    Document is posted on the World Wide Web without pages, the CPO may 
    use readily comprehensible hyperlinks instead of page numbers to 
    denote specific sections. Both page numbers and hyperlinks allow the 
    reader to locate a particular section.
        (29) (Electronic Version Identical to Paper Version) ABC is a 
    CTA who operates a homepage on the World Wide Web, with a hyperlink 
    to enable visitors to download her Disclosure Document. The 
    Disclosure Document can be downloaded in a form compatible with 
    Microsoft Word for Windows or WordPerfect for DOS. Once downloaded, 
    the Disclosure Document is in all respects identical to the paper 
    version, including page numbers, bold-faced text and capsule 
    performance information. In this case, ABC has met the format 
    requirements of Rules 4.34.
        (30) (Electronic Version of Disclosure Document May Include More 
    Recent Performance Data) ABC is a CTA who operates a website. ABC's 
    hardcopy Disclosure Document is dated August 1 and reflects the 
    ABC's performance through July 31. It is now October 1, and ABC 
    wants to amend the performance section of its Disclosure Document 
    that appears on the website to include performance through September 
    30. ABC may amend the performance section of the website Disclosure 
    Document to include more recent performance data. However, the 
    calculation and presentation of such recent performance data must be 
    in accordance with Commission rules. ABC is not required to amend 
    its hardcopy Disclosure Document, which still may reflect ABC's 
    performance through July 31. Under Rule 4.26, ABC may solicit 
    prospective clients with the October 1 Disclosure Document and the 
    version on its website with more recent performance data. However, 
    on May 1 of the next year (i.e., nine months after date of the 
    hardcopy Disclosure Document), ABC may no longer use the hardcopy 
    Disclosure Document. Beginning May 1, ABC must use a new Disclosure 
    Document. In addition, the Disclosure Document used on the website, 
    which contains updated performance data, must also be amended to 
    conform to any other changes reflected in the new hardcopy 
    Disclosure Document.
        (31) (Disclosure Documents Delivered Electronically Must Be 
    Current and Updated) DEF is a CTA who distributes a hardcopy of its 
    Disclosure Document and also operates a website with an electronic 
    version of its Disclosure Document. DEF solicits through its website 
    but also sends each prospective client a hardcopy of its Disclosure 
    Document via postal mail. The Disclosure Document DEF sends its 
    prospective clients has been updated to reflect some material 
    changes, but the electronic version on the Internet has not. DEF is 
    in violation of Rule 4.36. Even though DEF provides its prospective 
    customers with a current version of its Disclosure Document, it may 
    not solicit customers using a superseded or out-of-date Disclosure 
    Document.
        (32) (Outdated Disclosure Documents May Not Be Used on 
    Electronic Media) ABC is a CTA who operates a site on the World Wide 
    Web. ABC's website contains a Disclosure Document that is more than 
    nine months old. The website also contains a form that allows 
    persons to request a current version of ABC's Disclosure Document. 
    ABC is in violation of Rule 4.36. Even though ABC allows prospective 
    clients to obtain a current version of its Disclosure Document, ABC 
    may not continue to provide its out-of-date Disclosure Document on 
    the World Wide Web.
        (33) (Outdated Disclosure Document Contained on CD-ROM Cannot Be 
    Used To Solicit Clients) RST is a CTA who has created a CD-ROM 
    containing promotional materials and a Disclosure Document. The date 
    of the Disclosure Document on the CD-ROM is January 15, 1995. On 
    December 15, 1995, RST provides a prospective client with a copy of 
    his CD-ROM but at the same time provides the client with a revised 
    Disclosure Document dated October 1, 1995, which reflects certain 
    material changes. Even though RST has provided the prospective 
    client with a revised Disclosure Document, RST is in violation of 
    Rule 4.36(b) because the CD-ROM contains a Disclosure Document dated 
    more then nine months prior to its use. After October 15, 1995, RST 
    may no longer distribute the CD-ROM with the Disclosure Document 
    dated January 15, 1995.
    
    IV. Electronic Filing With the Commission
    
    A. Pilot Program Commencing October 15, 1996
    
        In response to numerous inquiries from managed futures 
    professionals, the Commission is evaluating the potential benefits and 
    costs of electronic document filing, both to registrants and to the 
    Commission's regulatory program. The Commission is also considering the 
    relative merits of several alternatives for implementing an electronic 
    filing system. In furtherance of this objective, the Commission is 
    announcing a pilot program for optional electronic filing of Disclosure 
    Documents and is requesting comments concerning the standards and 
    specifications that should be utilized if the Commission elects to 
    establish a permanent program for electronic filing.
        The Commission has determined to initiate a six-month pilot program 
    for
    
    [[Page 42164]]
    
    electronic filing of CPO and CTA Disclosure Documents, commencing 
    October 15, 1996. Participation in the pilot program will be voluntary 
    and will be open to all registered CPOs and CTAs who are members of 
    NFA. The pilot program will be conducted by the Commission's Division 
    of Trading and Markets and will be restricted (at least initially) to 
    electronic submission of Disclosure Documents (and amendments thereto) 
    which CTAs and CPOs are required to file with the Commission pursuant 
    to Rules 4.36 and 4.26, respectively. Electronic filing of other 
    documents, such as annual reports for commodity pools required to be 
    filed pursuant to Rule 4.22, and documents filed to obtain relief 
    available under certain Commission rules, such as notices of 
    eligibility under Rule 4.5, notices of claims of exemption under Rule 
    4.7, claims of exemption under Rule 4.12(b) and notices of exemption 
    under Rule 4.14(a)(8), may be implemented in the future.113 
    Participation in the pilot program will not obligate a registrant to 
    provide its Disclosure Documents to prospective clients or pool 
    participants by electronic means.
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        \113\ The Commission is considering electronic filing of the 
    entire range of documents and reports covered by the Act and 
    Commission rules, including without limitation, Forms 1-FR for FCMs 
    and IBs, Form 103 (Large Trader Reporting Form), and Form 40 
    (Statement of Reporting Trader). As noted in Section I, the 
    Commission has approved self-regulatory organization (``SRO'') 
    programs (notably those of the CBT and the CME) permitting FCMs and 
    IBs to file electronically with such SROs the periodic financial 
    reports on Form 1-FR required by Commission Rule 1.10. In Advisory 
    28-96, [Current Transfer Binder] Comm. Fut. L. Rep. (CCH) para. 
    26,711 (May 28, 1996), the Commission noted its intention to 
    implement procedures to permit FCMs and IBs that file electronically 
    with SROs also to file their financial reports electronically with 
    the Commission.
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        Under the pilot program as currently envisioned, a partici-pating 
    registrant will transmit its Disclosure Document, as an attachment to 
    electronic mail, to an address specified by the Commission for purposes 
    of this program. Receipt of the filed document will be acknowledged by 
    electronic mail, followed by the customary review process conducted by 
    Commission staff. Electronic mail also may be used by Commission staff 
    for providing comments on the filed Disclosure Document and by the 
    registrant to submit document revisions in response to staff comments.
        The Commission's pilot program will accommodate use of two widely 
    utilized commercial word processing systems without the need for 
    extensive formatting specifications, and it will not require 
    specialized coding and formatting of numerical tables. At the outset, 
    Documents filed under the Commission's pilot program will not be made 
    publicly available in an electronic equivalent of a public reference 
    room, as is currently the case with the document dissemination function 
    of the EDGAR system; however, this enhancement may be considered in the 
    future.114
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        \114\ Persons may, of course, obtain hardcopies of Disclosure 
    Documents filed under the pilot program through a request made under 
    the Freedom of Information Act, 5 U.S.C. 552 (1994), as implemented 
    in Part 145 of the Commission rules.
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    B. Filing Procedure Under the Pilot Program
    
        The Commission is establishing the following procedures for CTAs 
    and CPOs seeking to employ electronic filing under the pilot program. 
    The Commission welcomes comments concerning the adequacy and 
    appropriateness of these requirements, and suggestions concerning any 
    additional criteria that the Commission should consider in the pilot 
    program.
        Beginning October 15, 1996, a CPO or CTA may file a Disclosure 
    Document (or amendment) by taking the following steps:
        1. Save the Disclosure Document as a WordPerfect for DOS (version 
    5.1 or earlier) or a Microsoft Word for Windows (version 6.0 or 
    earlier) file. Retain both a hardcopy and a diskette or tape backup.
        2. Use the participating registrant's NFA identification number as 
    the file name for the saved Disclosure Document, and add a file 
    extension (DD1, DD2, DD3, . . . D10, D11, etc.) indicating whether the 
    submission is sequentially the first, second, etc. submission by the 
    registrant.115
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        \115\ For example, XYZ, whose NFA identification number is 
    99999999, is a CTA with separate Disclosure Documents for two 
    trading programs. XYZ names one Disclosure Document ``99999999.DD1'' 
    and the other ``99999999.DD2.'' The first amendment to either 
    Disclosure Document will be named ``99999999.DD3,'' and each 
    subsequent submission will follow the same pattern. In the event 
    that a registrant has more than one version of the Disclosure 
    Document for a particular trading program or pool offering, each 
    version would similarly be given a separate file extension.
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        3. Add the file as an attachment to an electronic mail message 
    addressed to tm-pilot-program@cftc.gov.116 Persons who participate 
    in the pilot program must agree to receive comments from Commission 
    staff by electronic mail. Accordingly, the message text should include 
    the electronic mail address where comments, if any, may be sent. 
    Confirmation of receipt of the filed Disclosure Document will be 
    provided by Commission staff to the electronic mail address supplied by 
    the participating registrant, and the Disclosure Document will undergo 
    the customary review process. Following review of the filed document, 
    staff comments also will be transmitted to the participating 
    registrant's electronic mail address as an electronic mail attachment 
    in Microsoft Word for Windows or WordPerfect 5.1 for DOS format.
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        \116\ Persons participating in the pilot program are not 
    required to make duplicate filings under Rules 4.26(d) or 4.36(d).
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        4. Submit the registrant's response to staff comments by electronic 
    mail message to the Commission's electronic mail filing address. The 
    message should indicate the date of the staff comment message, and any 
    revised text or pages should be attached in the same manner as the 
    original filing (using the registrant's NFA identification number and 
    the appropriate sequential file extension as described in No. 2, 
    above).
        For purposes of the pilot program, a document of up to one megabyte 
    (approximately 230 pages) can be received as an electronic mail 
    attachment. If a participating registrant's Disclosure Document exceeds 
    one megabyte, the registrant should contact the Division of Trading and 
    Markets, Managed Funds Branch, for guidance.
    
    C. Expansion of Pilot Program; Request for Comments
    
        The Commission intends to use its experience with the pilot program 
    to develop and implement a permanent system for electronic filing of 
    Disclosure Documents. As stated previously, the Commission will also 
    consider permitting electronic filing of other types of required 
    documents (e.g., annual reports to commodity pool participants, and 
    notices of claims of exemption filed pursuant to Commission rules), as 
    well as permanent implementation of electronic filing of CPO and CTA 
    Disclosure Documents, either as an alternative to paper filing or as 
    the sole filing method.
        Interested persons are invited to comment on the proposed structure 
    of the pilot program, as well as the contemplated adoption of a 
    permanent electronic filing system. Specifically, the Commission seeks 
    comment on: (1) whether it is preferable to retain the option for 
    registrants to submit documents in paper form or to eliminate that 
    alternative in favor of a universal requirement to file electronically; 
    (2) whether security concerns make it advisable to require that filings 
    be encrypted or otherwise protected from unauthorized interception and 
    use, and if so, what measures would be appropriate (e.g., commercially 
    available encryption software); (3)
    
    [[Page 42165]]
    
    whether there is a need for a graphics capability (beyond that 
    currently offered by the WordPerfect 5.1 for DOS and Microsoft Word for 
    Windows programs) to permit transmission of pictorial or graphic 
    material included in Disclosure Documents or in other documents 
    required to be filed with the Commission; (4) whether the Commission 
    should specify uniform formatting requirements for electronically-filed 
    documents (e.g., margin dimensions, type font and point size, 
    pagination, etc.) and if so, what the appropriate requirements would 
    be; and (5) whether the selection of word processing formats currently 
    being considered by the Commission for use in the pilot program 
    (WordPerfect 5.1 for DOS or Microsoft Word for Windows) is adequate, 
    and if not, which additional word processing programs or text formats 
    registrants should be permitted to use.
    
    D. Unsolicited Proposal Recently Presented to the Commission
    
        The Commission has been approached by a prospective vendor 
    (``Vendor'') with a proposal to implement a system to permit electronic 
    filing of Disclosure Documents utilizing a computer system developed by 
    Vendor. The Vendor's prototype system assumes use of a WordPerfect or 
    Microsoft Word word processing system in a Microsoft Windows operating 
    system environment. Registrants would download from the Commission's 
    Internet website a document ``packaging'' program, which would prompt 
    the registrant to provide identifying information and facilitate secure 
    uploading of the registrant's Disclosure Document to Vendor's 
    system.117 Vendor has offered to develop a separate program for 
    Commission staff handling and tracking of filed Disclosure Documents 
    during the review process. Vendor's system, if implemented, may be 
    designed to accommodate other required Commission filings, including 
    CPO annual reports to pool participants. Under one variation of 
    Vendor's system, filed Disclosure Documents would ``reside'' 
    electronically on a server located at Vendor's offices, rather than at 
    the Commission's headquarters.
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        \117\ The document packaging software includes a scrambling or 
    encryption function enabling transmission of the document over phone 
    lines without permitting unauthorized persons to read or alter the 
    text.
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        The Commission plans to publish in Commerce Business Daily a notice 
    seeking information and indications of interest on the part of 
    proprietary vendors and developers of data processing and 
    telecommunication systems with respect to developing and implementing a 
    system to accept, track and control electronically-filed documents, as 
    well as incoming and outgoing correspondence in connection with such 
    documents.
        Comment is sought regarding the advisability of the Commission's 
    selecting and entering into a contractual relationship with one or more 
    independent vendors to facilitate electronic filing of documents on 
    behalf of the Commission, and/or to serve as a repository or 
    dissemination point to provide public access to electronically-filed 
    documents. Finally, to the extent that a filing fee would be necessary 
    to cover the operating and development costs of Vendor's system, the 
    Commission seeks comment on the willingness of registrants to bear such 
    costs and suggestions concerning how such fees should be calculated.
    
    E. Future Releases
    
        The Commission invites comment not only on the specific issues 
    discussed in this release, but also on any other approaches or issues 
    that should be considered in connection with facilitating the use of 
    electronic media. In the future, the Commission may issue further 
    releases, as may be suitable to expand or provide additional guidance 
    regarding the pilot program; to propose and adopt rules and amendments 
    to existing rules to implement electronic filing procedures; or to give 
    guidance generally with respect to the use of electronic media in the 
    context of the Commission's regulatory program.
    
        Issued in Washington, DC, on May 8, 1996, by the Commission.
    Catherine D. Dixon,
    Assistant to the Secretary of the Commission.
    [FR Doc. 96-20691 Filed 8-13-96; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6351-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
10/15/1996
Published:
08/14/1996
Department:
Commodity Futures Trading Commission
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Interpretation; Solicitation of comment.
Document Number:
96-20691
Dates:
This interpretation is effective on October 15, 1996. Comments should be received on or before October 15, 1996.
Pages:
42146-42165 (20 pages)
PDF File:
96-20691.pdf
CFR: (1)
17 CFR 4