96-21103. Correction of Trading Records  

  • [Federal Register Volume 61, Number 162 (Tuesday, August 20, 1996)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 42999-43002]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 96-21103]
    
    
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    COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION
    
    17 CFR Part 1
    
    
    Correction of Trading Records
    
    AGENCY: Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (``Commission'') has 
    amended Commission regulations, which address the preparation, 
    submission and correction of trading cards, to make its provisions 
    applicable to all trading records. The Commission also has amended 
    regulations, which require the use of non-erasable ink and addresses 
    correction of errors, to require that the correction of erroneous 
    information on trading records will be accomplished in such a manner 
    that the originally recorded information must not be obliterated or 
    otherwise made illegible. The Commission has further amended the 
    regulations to require that a ply of the trading card, or in the 
    absence of plies the original trading card, that subsequently is 
    rewritten to correct erroneous information must be submitted to 
    contract market personnel or the clearing member in accordance with 
    contract market rules which set forth the required collection schedule 
    for trading cards. Contract markets are required to promulgate rules to 
    that effect.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: October 21, 1996.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Duane C. Andresen, Special Counsel, 
    Division of Trading and Markets, Commodity Futures Trading Commission, 
    Three Lafayette Centre, 1155 21st Street, NW., Washington, DC 20581. 
    Telephone: (202) 418-5490.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. Introduction
    
        Regulation 1.35(d)(7), which became effective on May 7, 1990,1 
    requires that trading cards prepared by members of contract markets 
    must be completed in non-erasable ink and submitted in accordance with 
    contract market rules adopted pursuant to Regulation 1.35(j)(1).2 
    It also provides, in paragraph (d)(7)(ii), that a member of a contract 
    market may correct any errors by crossing out erroneous information or 
    rewriting the trading card. Regulation 1.35(d)(7) was one of various 
    rule amendments adopted by the Commission that were intended, among 
    other things, to limit the opportunity for the fabrication or 
    alteration of trading records, to ensure accountability for trading 
    cards and to enhance exchange audit trails and trade surveillance.
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        \1\ 55 FR 8127 (March 7, 1990).
        \2\ Regulation 1.35(j)(1) requires that each contract market 
    maintain in effect rules which require, among other things, that 
    trading records prepared by a member of the contract market pursuant 
    to paragraphs (a-1) and (d) of this section be submitted to contract 
    market personnel or the clearing member within 15 minutes of 
    designated intervals  not  to  exceed  30  minutes.  Paragraph (a-1) 
    requires the creation of order tickets; paragraph (d) requires the 
    preparation of trading cards or other records showing purchases or 
    sales executed on or subject to the rules of a contract market.
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        Notwithstanding these provisions, the Commission has found, based 
    upon its oversight activities, instances in which it appears that trade 
    prices and quantities have been altered on trading records in order to 
    accomplish abuse of customer orders. The Commission believes that this 
    type of activity may be accomplished under the guise of correcting 
    erroneous information on a trading record if the information originally 
    recorded is obscured. Such treatment of trading records renders it more 
    difficult for the Commission and the exchanges to detect potentially 
    fraudulent activity. Further, correcting erroneous information by 
    obliteration of the original data can facilitate illegal purposes and 
    increases the difficulty of determining how to correctly reconstruct 
    and surveill trade activity.
        The Commission believes that obscuring trade information originally 
    recorded not only can be used to facilitate illegal or fraudulent 
    conduct, but also is in itself illegal. Obscuring the information 
    originally recorded violates the Regulation 1.35 requirement that 
    members prepare accurate and complete trading records. The requirement 
    to record trades in non-erasable ink, found in Regulations 1.35 
    (d)(7)(ii) and (j)(8), was implemented, in part, to prevent the 
    obliteration of trade data through erasures. The paragraph (d)(7)(ii) 
    requirement that members be fully accountable for trading cards that 
    are rewritten in order to correct errors exists to assure that the 
    originally recorded data are maintained. As the Commission
    
    [[Page 43000]]
    
    has stated with regard to the requirement that members be accountable 
    for their trading cards, ``[b]ased on Regulations 1.35(d)(6) and 
    (j)(6), the Commission and the contract markets should be assured that 
    trading cards which may assist in determining whether improper activity 
    has occurred are available.'' 3
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        \3\ 55 FR 8127, 8135 (March 7, 1990).
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        On June 6, 1996 the Commission published for public comment in the 
    Federal Register proposed amendments to Regulation 1.35(d)(7) 4 to 
    expressly address the issue by specifically prescribing the method by 
    which a member of a contract market may correct errors on trading 
    records.
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        \4\ 61 FR 28806 (June 6, 1996).
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    II. Comments Received
    
        The Commission received four comment letters on the proposed 
    amendments, all from contract markets.5 Two of the commenters 
    supported, and one raised no objection to, the regulatory goals of the 
    proposal but were opposed to the proposal's requirement that a specific 
    method be used, i.e., crossing out erroneous information with no more 
    than a single line through each character. One commenter believed that 
    the amendment was unnecessary and provided no additional benefits to 
    the exchange. This commenter further stated that original trade 
    information that is erroneous and subsequently changed such that the 
    original information is illegible is contrary to the provisions of the 
    current Regulation 1.35(d)(7). The Commission has carefully reviewed 
    and considered the comments received and, as a result, has modified and 
    clarified the proposed amendments as appropriate.
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        \5\ Comment letters were received from the Chicago Mercantile 
    Exchange (``CME''), New York Mercantile Exchange (``NYMEX''), 
    Coffee, Sugar & Cocoa Exchange, Inc. (``CSCE'') and Kansas City 
    Board of Trade (``KCBT'').
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    III. Amendments to Regulation 1.35(d)(7)
    
        The final amendments would make paragraph (d)(7), which addresses, 
    among other things, the preparation of trading cards, applicable to all 
    trading records. The final amendments would modify paragraph 
    (d)(7)(ii), to require that the correction of erroneous information on 
    trading records must be accomplished in such a manner that the 
    originally recorded information would not be obliterated or otherwise 
    made illegible. The final amendments also would modify paragraph 
    (d)(7)(ii) to require that a ply of the trading card, or in the absence 
    of plies the original trading card, that subsequently is rewritten to 
    correct erroneous information must be submitted to contract market 
    personnel or the clearing member in accordance with contract market 
    rules which set forth the required collection schedule for trading 
    cards.
    
    A. Proposed Paragraph (d)(7)
    
    1. The Proposed Amendments
        The proposed amendments would have made the provisions of paragraph 
    (d)(7) applicable to all trading records, not just trading cards. Thus, 
    the error correction provisions of paragraph (d)(7)(ii) would be 
    applicable to all trading records, thereby assuring that all trading 
    records are subject to the same error correction standards currently in 
    existence with regard to trading cards.6 Further, contract markets 
    would be required to maintain in effect rules that would require errors 
    on other trading records to be corrected in the manner prescribed by 
    paragraph (d)(7)(ii).7
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        \6\ With regard to trading cards only, the member would still 
    have been able to correct erroneous information by rewriting the 
    trading card. Pursuant to paragraph (d)(6), the member would have 
    remained accountable for any trading card that was subsequently 
    rewritten.
        \7\ Regulation 1.35(j)(8) requires that each contract market 
    maintain in effect rules which require that members complete trades 
    in non-erasable ink in the manner prescribed by paragraph 
    (d)(7)(ii).
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        The other trading records to which this provision would have 
    applied included order tickets or other written records prepared under 
    Regulation 1.35(a-1) (2), (3) or (4), as well as order tickets received 
    on the floor through electronic order routing systems, and trading 
    records prepared for ``flashed'' orders.
    2. Comments Received
        In its comment letter, the CSCE stated that it had no objection to 
    the proposal to amend Regulation 1.35(d)(7) to make the error 
    correction procedure applicable to all trading records. The other 
    commenters did not specifically address this issue.
    3. Regulation 1.35(d)(7)
        Accordingly, the Commission has determined to make the proposed 
    amendment final as written, applying the provisions of paragraph (d)(7) 
    to all trading records, including order tickets or other written 
    records prepared under Regulation 1.35(a-1) (2), (3) or (4), order 
    tickets received on the floor through electronic order routing systems, 
    and trading records prepared for ``flashed'' orders.
    
    B. Proposed Paragraph (d)(7)(ii)
    
    1. The Proposed Amendments
        The proposed amendments to paragraph (d)(7)(ii) would have required 
    that erroneous information crossed out on a trading record would have 
    to be crossed out with no more than a single line through each 
    character, without obliterating or otherwise making illegible any of 
    the originally recorded information. Thus, the erroneous information 
    being crossed out would not be obliterated and an audit would reveal 
    the original information recorded on the trading record, as well as any 
    information subsequently recorded.
    2. Comments Received
        Although all commenters recognized the need to maintain the 
    integrity of the originally recorded information, they were opposed to 
    the specificity of the amendment's proposed requirement that the 
    erroneous information be crossed out with no more than a single line 
    through each character. The CME commented that the requirement to cross 
    out erroneous information with a single line will prove counter-
    productive and could conceivably result in greater outtrade percentages 
    with potentially significant economic impact. Further, the CME stated 
    that the CME and other contract markets are in the best position to 
    determine what constitutes ``obliteration'' and are best able to police 
    such activity. In its comment, NYMEX stated that the requirement of a 
    ``single line'' deletion is unnecessary and that the Commission's goal 
    would be furthered simply by requiring that erroneous information not 
    be obliterated or otherwise made illegible so that exchanges would 
    retain the flexibility to determine the most effective means for 
    determining compliance. The CSCE commented that the single line 
    requirement overreaches in achieving the objective of preventing the 
    creation of fictitious trading records and recommended that the 
    Commission permit the correction of trade record errors as is usual and 
    customary for a particular member provided the original trade 
    information is not obscured or rendered illegible. The KCBT commented 
    that it was highly unlikely that the single line would always be 
    recognized as erroneous information by clerks entering trade 
    information for clearing, thus resulting in an outtrade.
    3. Regulation 1.35(d)(7)(ii)
        After reviewing the comments, the Commission is persuaded that the 
    method by which the erroneous information is corrected need not be
    
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    specified by Commission regulation so long as the regulatory objective, 
    the legibility of the originally recorded information, is met. The 
    Commission is aware that this objective can be attained by more than 
    one method. Accordingly, the amendment has been modified to delete the 
    single line requirement and to state that a member may correct any 
    errors by crossing out erroneous information without obliterating or 
    otherwise making illegible any of the originally recorded information. 
    The method by which this objective is identified to exchange membership 
    and enforced by each exchange may be determined by exchange rules.
        The Commission also has decided to amend paragraph (d)(7)(ii) to 
    add the requirement that a ply of the trading card, or in the absence 
    of plies the original trading card, that subsequently is rewritten to 
    correct erroneous information also must be submitted to contract market 
    personnel or the clearing member in accordance with contract market 
    rules which set forth the required collection schedule for trading 
    cards.8 As stated previously, the Commission should be assured 
    that trading cards which may assist in determining whether improper 
    activity has occurred are available. Accordingly, the Commission is 
    requiring that a ply of the rewritten trading card, or in the absence 
    of plies the original trading card, be collected. The collection of 
    such rewritten cards would occur in accordance with the schedule for 
    collection of trading cards in place under exchange rules which were 
    implemented pursuant to Commission Regulation 1.35(j)(1).9
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        \8\ As previously noted, trading cards prepared by members must 
    be submitted in accordance with contract market rules adopted 
    pursuant to Regulation 1.35(j)(1). The Commission believes that all 
    exchanges currently use multi-ply trading cards. At least one ply, 
    where practicable the top ply completed in non-erasable ink, must be 
    submitted to contract market personnel or the clearing member 
    pursuant to Regulation 1.35(j)(1). Where the top ply is not 
    submitted to contract market personnel or the clearing member, it 
    must be retained pursuant to Regulation 1.31 by the member as a 
    record required by Regulation 1.35(a).
        \9\ The Commission recognizes that this creates an exception to 
    the Regulation 1.35(j)(1) provision that contract market rules need 
    not require that those original source documents which cannot be 
    relied upon by the contract market or clearing member for clearing 
    purposes be submitted.
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        Regulation 1.35(d)(7)(ii) states, in current and amended form, that 
    the member is accountable pursuant to paragraph (d)(6) for any card 
    that subsequently is rewritten. With regard to contract markets on 
    which the member's trading cards ordinarily are retained by his 
    clearing member, the Commission has previously stated, in the context 
    of the responsibility for a rewritten trading card, that the clearing 
    member would be responsible for those trading cards not used for trade 
    submission.10 With regard to contract markets on which the member 
    retains his own trading cards, a member who has a clerk rewrite his 
    trades on a new trading card because of an error now will have to 
    submit a ply of the rewritten trading card, or in the absence of plies 
    the original trading card, to the contract market.11 Thus, either 
    the clearing member or the contract market will have a ply of the 
    rewritten trading card, collected from the member within 15 minutes 
    after the 30-minute trading interval, available to assist in any 
    investigation conducted to determine whether improper activity has 
    occurred.
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        \10\ 54 FR 37117, 37122 (September 7, 1989). In these 
    circumstances, the dual requirement to submit a ply of the rewritten 
    trading card, or the original trading card, and remain accountable 
    for the card could be met in two ways. First, if the top ply, or the 
    original card, completed in non-erasable ink, is submitted to and 
    retained by the clearing member, the collection requirement is met 
    and, further, the clearing member assumes accountability for the 
    rewritten card. Second, if the member keeps the top ply and submits 
    a copy to the clearing member, the collection requirement is met and 
    the member remains accountable for the card and must retain the top 
    ply.
        \11\ On those exchanges where the trading cards are multi-ply 
    and are collected by the exchange rather than a clearing member, 
    whether the member retains the top ply written in ink or a copy 
    would be determined by contract market rules but the member would, 
    nonetheless, be accountable for the rewritten trading card.
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    IV. Related Matters
    
    A. Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
        The Regulatory Flexibility Act (``RFA''), 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq., 
    requires that agencies, in proposing rules, consider the impact of 
    those rules on small businesses. The Commission has previously 
    determined to evaluate within the context of a particular rule proposal 
    whether all or some contract market members should be considered 
    ``small entities'' for purposes of the RFA and, if so, to analyze the 
    economic impact on contract market members of any such rule at that 
    time. 47 FR 18618, 18620 (April 30, 1982).
        The Acting Chairman, on behalf of the Commission, hereby certifies, 
    pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 605(b), that the action taken herein will not have 
    a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small 
    entities.
        The Commission recognizes that contract market members would be 
    subject to the proposed amendments and that certain contract market 
    members could be considered to be small entities for the purposes of 
    the RFA. However, the Commission believes that the final amendment, as 
    designed, would not impose a significant economic impact on such 
    members.
    
    B. Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1980 (``ACT''), 44 U.S.C. 3501 et 
    seq., imposes certain requirements on federal agencies (including the 
    Commission) in connection with their conducting or sponsoring any 
    collection of information as defined by the Act. While this rule has no 
    burden, the group of rules (3038-0022) of which this is a part has the 
    following burden:
        Average burden hours per response--3,546.
        Number of Respondents--15,286.
        Frequency of Response--On occasion.
        Copies of the Office of Management and Budget approved information 
    collection package associated with this rule may be obtained from Jeff 
    Hill, Office of Management and Budget, Room 3228, NEOB, Washington, DC 
    20503, (202) 395-7340.
    
    List of Subjects in 17 CFR Part 1
    
        Commodity futures, Commodity options, Contract markets, Customers, 
    Members of contract markets, Noncompetitive trading, Reporting and 
    recordkeeping requirements.
    
        In consideration of the foregoing, and pursuant to the authority 
    contained in the Commodity Exchange Act and, in particular, Sections 4, 
    4g, 5, 5a, and 8a, 7 U.S.C. 6, 6g, 7, 7a, and 12a, the Commission 
    hereby proposes to amend part 1 of chapter I of title 17 of the Code of 
    Federal Regulations as follows:
    
    PART 1--GENERAL REGULATIONS UNDER THE COMMODITY EXCHANGE ACT
    
        1. The authority citation for part 1 continues to read as follows:
    
        Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1a, 2, 2a, 4, 4a, 6, 6a, 6b, 6c, 6d, 6e, 6f, 
    6g, 6h, 6i, 6j, 6k, 6l, 6m, 6n, 6o, 6p, 7, 7a, 7b, 8, 9, 12, 12a, 
    12c, 13a, 13a-1, 16, 16a, 19, 21, 23 and 24, unless otherwise noted.
    
        2. Section 1.35(d)(7) is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 1.35  Records of cash commodity, futures, and option transactions.
    
    * * * * *
        (d) * * *
        (7) Trading records prepared by a member of a contract market 
    pursuant to contract market rules must:
        (i) Be submitted in accordance with contract market rules adopted 
    pursuant to paragraph (j)(1) of this section; and
        (ii) Be completed in non-erasable ink. A member may correct any 
    errors by
    
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    crossing out erroneous information without obliterating or otherwise 
    making illegible any of the originally recorded information. With 
    regard to trading cards only, a member may correct erroneous 
    information by rewriting the trading card; provided, however, that the 
    member must submit a ply of the trading card, or in the absence of 
    plies the original trading card, that is subsequently rewritten in 
    accordance with contract market rules which set forth the required 
    collection schedule for trading cards and provided further that the 
    member is accountable for any trading card that subsequently is 
    rewritten pursuant to paragraph (d)(6) of this section.
    * * * * *
        Issued in Washington, DC on August 13, 1996 by the Commission.
    Catherine D. Dixon,
    Assistant to the Secretary of the Commission.
    [FR Doc. 96-21103 Filed 8-19-96; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6351-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
10/21/1996
Published:
08/20/1996
Department:
Commodity Futures Trading Commission
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
96-21103
Dates:
October 21, 1996.
Pages:
42999-43002 (4 pages)
PDF File:
96-21103.pdf
CFR: (1)
17 CFR 1.35