99-13514. Recordkeeping  

  • [Federal Register Volume 64, Number 102 (Thursday, May 27, 1999)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 28735-28743]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 99-13514]
    
    
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    COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION
    
    17 CFR Part 1
    
    
    Recordkeeping
    
    AGENCY: Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
    
    ACTION: Final rules.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Commodity Futures Trading Commission is adopting 
    amendments to the recordkeeping obligations established in Regulation 
    1.31. Specifically, the amendments will allow recordkeepers to store 
    most categories of required records on either micrographic or 
    electronic storage media for the full five-year maintenance period, 
    thereby harmonizing procedures for those firms regulated by both the 
    Commission and the Securities and Exchange Commission. Recordkeepers 
    will have the flexibility necessary to maximize the cost reduction and 
    time savings available from improved storage technology while 
    continuing to provide Commission auditors and investigators with timely 
    access to a reliable system of records.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: June 28, 1999.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Edson G. Case, Counsel, or Lurie 
    Plessala Duperier, Special Counsel, Division of Trading and Markets, 
    Commodity Futures Trading Commission, Three Lafayette Centre, 1155 
    21st. Street, NW, Washington, DC 20581. Telephone (202) 418-5430.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. Introduction
    
        On June 5, 1998, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission 
    (``Commission'' or ``CFTC'') published a Federal Register Notice 
    proposing several amendments to the recordkeeping requirements of 
    Commission Regulation 1.31 (the ``Proposal'')\1\ In light of the 
    significant number of Commission registrants that are subject to the 
    recordkeeping requirements of the Securities and Exchange Commission 
    (``SEC''), the Proposal included many provisions similar to those 
    adopted by the SEC in 1997.\2\ The Proposal's overall design reflected 
    the Commission's dual goals of ``maximiz[ing] the cost-reduction and 
    time-savings arising from technological developments in the area of 
    electronic storage media'' and maintaining the type of safeguards that 
    ``ensure the reliability of the recordkeeping process.'' \3\ The 
    comment period on the Proposal originally was due to expire on August 
    4, 1998. Upon request from the Futures Industry Association (``FIA''), 
    the Commission extended the deadline to August 18, 1998, to encourage 
    comment by interested persons.
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        \1\ 63 FR 30668 (June 5, 1998).
        \2\ 62 FR 6469 (Feb. 12, 1997). The SEC's rulemaking involved 
    reporting requirements for brokers or dealers under the Securities 
    Exchange Act of 1934. The Commission has relied on these rules in 
    addressing recordkeeping issues on prior occasions. See, e.g., 62 FR 
    39104 (July 22, 1997) (interpreting Commission requirements 
    affecting the use of electronic media by commodity pool operators 
    (``CPOs'') and commodity trading advisors (``CTAs'') and amending 
    Part 4 of the Commission's Rules in light of the interpretation); 62 
    FR 31507 (June 10, 1997) (issuing guidance regarding a futures 
    commission merchant's (``FCM's'') electronic delivery of 
    confirmation, purchase-and-sale, and monthly statements to customers 
    and the related recordkeeping requirements); 62 FR 7675 (February 
    20, 1997) (permitting the use of electronic records of customer 
    orders generated by an electronic order-routing system).
        \3\ 63 FR at 30668.
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        The commission is publishing final rules that respond to comments 
    expressed by industry participants and that track closely the SEC's 
    recordkeeping requirements. While the final rules are similar to the 
    Proposal in most respects, the Commission intends to modify certain 
    staff practices in light of the comments received. The final rules and 
    modifications to staff practices will provide recordkeepers with 
    opportunities to reduce costs and improve both the efficiency and 
    security of their recordkeeping systems by initiating a transition to 
    electronic storage of Commission-required records.
    
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        The Commission recognizes the important role improved technology 
    can play in the continued development of the futures industry. 
    Minimizing unnecessary regulatory obstacles to the adopted of improved 
    technology is a goal of the industry members, customers, and the 
    Commission. Indeed, the pace of technological changes will require the 
    Commission continually to review the standards articulated in this rule 
    to ensure that the recordkeeping requirements reflect to the extent 
    possible the reality of established technological innovation. The 
    Commission therefore welcomes consultation with industry participants 
    and specific proposals regarding how the regulations might be amended 
    in the future to permit the futures industry to use available 
    technology and to respond to the Commission's legitimate need to have 
    access to complete and accurate records when necessary.
    
    II. Nature of the Proposal
    
    A. Current Rule 1.31
    
        Commission Regulation 1.31 sets forth certain recordkeeping 
    requirements imposed by the CEA and Commission regulations. Subsection 
    (a) describes the general rule. It mandates that all records required 
    to be kept by the Act or Commission regulations (``required records'') 
    be maintained for five years and be kept ``readily accessible'' during 
    the first two years. It also defines the inspection and production 
    rights of representatives of the Commission and the Department of 
    Justice.\4\
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        \4\ For example, Regulation 1.31(a) provides that all required 
    records shall be open to inspection by such representatives. It also 
    requires recordkeepers to provide copies of originals of any 
    required record ``promptly,'' upon request.
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        Subsections (b) and (c) establish alternative requirements for 
    required records that are stored as reproductions. Recordkeepers that 
    fulfill the conditions for alternative treatment may dispose of 
    original required records. Eligibility for alternative treatment is 
    limited to particular classes of records that are reproduced on 
    microfilm, microfiche, or optical disk. Computer and machine generated 
    records are immediately eligible for reproduction and storage on one of 
    the alternative media. Most other required records become eligible 
    after two years of storage. Trading cards and written customer orders 
    are ineligible; originals must be maintained for the full five-year 
    period. Subsection (c) describes the special inspection and production 
    conditions applicable to recordkeepers that choose to store 
    reproductions rather than original required records.\5\
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        \5\ For example, persons maintaining reproductions must maintain 
    indexes of the records and have facilities that permit 
    representatives of the Commission and the Department of Justice to 
    review and obtain hard copies of the records immediately. For 
    records stored on optical disk, Regulation 1.31(c)(1)(iii) also 
    mandates that a copy of each record be immediately provided ``on 
    Commission compatible machine-readable media as defined in 
    [Commission Regulation] 15.00(1) * * *.''
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    B. Proposed Rules
    
        The Proposal would eliminate the current requirement that the 
    original of most required records be maintained for two years.\6\ 
    Immediate storage of reproductions maintained on micrographic or 
    electronic storage media will enable recordkeepers to lower storage 
    costs significantly by discarding original records following the 
    successful storage of a reproduction. Moreover, the Proposal gave 
    recordkeepers increased flexibility in selecting the advanced 
    technology best suited to their business requirements by substituting 
    the less restrictive category ``electronic storage media'' for 
    ``optical disk'' in describing the storage media recordkeepers could 
    employ.\7\ As a result, recordkeepers may now take advantage of 
    electronic storage technologies such as digital tape.\8\
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        \6\ The Proposal retained the current regulation's requirement 
    that original trading cards and written customers orders be retained 
    for the full five-year period. Proposal at 30669-70. It also sought 
    to clarify the type of records ineligible for micrographic or 
    electronic storage by referring to ``written orders'' rather than 
    ``written customer orders'' and to ``documents on which trade 
    information is originally recorded in writing'' rather than 
    ``trading cards.'' The documents included in the Proposal's revised 
    category are among the ``original source documents'' that Commission 
    Regulation 1.35(a) requires to be retained and produced. Proposal at 
    30671.
        \7\ The current rule's definition of acceptable optical storage 
    systems, for example, requires that the system write files in ASCII 
    or EBCDIC format and use removable disks. The Proposal, however, 
    permitted recordkeepers to employ any digital storage medium or 
    system that meets four generic requirements: (1) preserves records 
    exclusively in a non-rewritable, non-erasable format; (2) verifies 
    automatically the quality and accuracy of the recording process; (3) 
    serializes the units of storage media and creates a time-date 
    whenever information is placed on the storage media; and (4) permits 
    the immediate downloading of indexes and records maintained on the 
    storage media to any of the media permitted by the regulation 
    (paper, micrographic media or electronic media).
        \8\ The Proposal did not require Commission approval of plans to 
    convert to a system that maintains records on electronic storage 
    media. Recordkeepers, however, must submit a representation to the 
    Commission that the selected electronic storage system meets the 
    four generic requirements.
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        In addition, consistent with both the SEC's approach and current 
    Commission requirements, the Proposal set forth several conditions on 
    recordkeepers who choose to meet their obligations by retaining 
    reproductions rather than original records--including safeguards to 
    endure timely access to the reproductions and the Commission's ability 
    to maintain its access to required records despite catastrophic 
    events.\9\
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        \9\ Recordkeepers were required to: (1) maintain facilities that 
    allow immediate production of both an easily readable image of the 
    stored records and an easily readable hard-copy; (2) maintain an 
    index of stored documents that permits immediate location of a 
    particular document; and (3) waive any privilege, claim of 
    confidentiality or other objection to disclosure of non-Commission-
    required documents stored on the same individual medium as 
    Commission-required documents. In regard to catastrophic events, the 
    Proposal noted that the Commission had lost access to required 
    records due to a fire at a Chicago storage warehouse in 1996. 
    Proposal at 30669 n.12. To avoid this problem in the future, the 
    Proposal required recordkeepers to maintain a duplicate of both 
    stored records and required indexes at a separate location.
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        The Proposal articulated additional conditions on recordkeepers 
    that choose to meet their obligations by retaining reproductions on 
    electronic storage media rather than micrographic storage media. First, 
    to ensure that there was an effective check on the reliability of the 
    transfer process, the Proposal required electronic recordkeepers to 
    maintain written operational procedures and controls that would provide 
    accountability over both the initial entry of required records to the 
    electronic storage media and the entry of each change made to any such 
    records.\10\ Second, due to practical limitations on the Commission's 
    ability to process data stored in the full range of available formats 
    and coding structures on the full range of storage media available to 
    recordkeepers, the Proposal required recordkeepers to provide copies of 
    requested records on ``Commission compatible machine-readable media'' 
    with the format and coding structure specified in the request.\11\ 
    Third, like the SEC's rules, the Proposal required recordkeepers using 
    electronic storage media to keep available for inspection ``all 
    information necessary to access records and indexes maintained on 
    electronic storage media * * *'' \12\
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        \10\ The Proposal indicated that the written operational 
    procedures and controls should provide for the systematic collection 
    of data that includes the identities of individuals inputting 
    records and making changes as well as the identity of any new 
    document created and record changed.
        \11\ Proposal at 30699. The Proposal noted that ``compatible 
    machine-readable media'' would be defined in accordance with 
    Commission Regulation 15.00(1).
        \12\ Proposal at 30674. This condition anticipated situations in 
    which electronic recorkeepers had stored required records but were 
    unable or unwilling to provide Commission representatives with an 
    appropriate means to view and copy specified documents. The Proposal 
    did recognize that the required information might not be freely 
    available to recordkeepers that obtained their storage technology 
    from third-party vendors. As a result, the Proposal permitted 
    recordkeepers to employ escrow agreements to protect the third-party 
    vendor's proprietary rights.
    
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        The Proposal contained a final, additional condition on 
    recordkeepers who stored all required records or all of a particular 
    class of required records solely on electronic storage media. To 
    address those situations in which such a recordkeeper was unable or 
    unwilling to provide Commission representatives with an appropriate 
    means to view and copy specified records and failed to maintain or 
    permit inspection of the information necessary to access requested 
    records, the Proposal required such recordkeepers to enter into an 
    arrangement with a third-party Technical Consultant.\13\
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        \13\ Such recordkeepers must provide the Technical Consultant 
    with access to the storage media containing their required records, 
    and the Technical Consultant must (1) have the ability to download 
    information from the recordkeeper's storage media to any medium 
    acceptable under Regulation 1.31 and (2) undertake to provide 
    Commission representatives with access to the records stored on the 
    recordkeeper's storage media including, as appropriate, arrangement 
    for downloading the records in the format designated by Commission 
    representatives.
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    III. Final Rules
    
        The Commission received nine comments on the Proposal. Commenters 
    included the National Futures Association (``NFA''), four designated 
    futures exchanges, two commodity industry associations, and First 
    Options of Chicago, Inc. (``FOC''), a registered futures commission 
    merchant (``FCM''), which submitted two comments.\14\ Most commenters 
    praised the Commission for proposing revisions to its recordkeeping 
    requirements. One commodity exchange praised the Proposal for giving 
    recordkeepers ``flexibility to use technological advances in the 
    electronic storage media to reduce the costs associated with record 
    retention.'' \15\ A commodity industry association commended the 
    Commission for moving toward a more generic, performance-based approach 
    to the definition of permissible record storage technology. Another 
    commodity exchange agreed that aspects of the Proposal could lead to 
    improvement in both the security and availability of required records. 
    NFA characterized the Proposal as ``a significant step in the right 
    direction * * *.\16\
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        \14\ One of FOC's submissions was a petition to amend Regulation 
    1.31, which was received shortly before the Commission published its 
    Proposal. To avoid undue delay, the Commission decided to publish 
    the Proposal and to treat this submission as a general comment on 
    the issues raised. FOC later filed a written submission responding 
    more specifically to the issues raised in the Proposal.
        \15\ Chicago Board of Trade Comment at 1.
        \16\ NFA Comment at 1.
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        In view of the significant number of firms subject to regulation 
    under both the federal commodity and securities laws, the final 
    regulations recognize the value of maintaining consistency, where 
    possible, between the Commission's approach to recordkeeping and that 
    of the SEC. The regulations do not reflect strict conformity with the 
    regulations the SEC adopted in 1997, however, because the Commission 
    concluded that there were significant differences between the 
    commodities and securities industry that justified retaining certain of 
    its current rules.\17\
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        \17\ In addition to the mandate that original written trading 
    cards and order tickets be maintained for five years, these include 
    requirements that recordkeepers: (1) maintain indexes of 
    electronically stored records that are available for immediate 
    examination and permit the location of any particular record to be 
    immediately ascertained; (2) keep the information necessary to 
    access electronically stored records and indexes available for 
    immediate examination; and (3) provide copies of specified records 
    on Commission-compatible machine-readable media with the format and 
    coding structure specified in the request.
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        The comments focused primarily on five areas, each of which is 
    discussed below.
    
    A. Maintaining Original Written Trading Cards and Order Tickets
    
        The Proposal permitted recordkeepers to transfer most categories of 
    records to micrographic or electronic storage media immediately, 
    eliminating the need to keep original records for two years. However, 
    original trading cards and customer order tickets were required to be 
    maintained for the full five-year period. A majority of commenters 
    cited cost, efficiency and security concerns in questioning why the 
    Commission declined to permit written trading cards and customer orders 
    to be stored electronically. Both commodity industry associations 
    emphasized that firms incur significant costs organizing, indexing, and 
    storing order tickets and trading cards. FOC noted that firms also 
    incur significant costs to retrieve such records, and one exchange 
    estimated that it expended $100,000 each year to retrieve records 
    requested under Commission Regulation 1.31. Commenters also questioned 
    why retention of original trading cards and order tickets is an 
    important element of an effective audit trail for futures transactions, 
    particularly since the SEC permits electronic storage of written 
    trading cards and order tickets. One commodity industry association 
    urged the Commission to ``consider whether the high cost and burden of 
    maintaining original written orders and trading cards is 
    disproportionate to the limited use of these documents in enforcement 
    cases.'' \18\
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        \18\ FIA Comment at 4.
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        The Commission recognizes that electronic storage of written 
    trading cards and order tickets could reduce storage costs, increase 
    the efficiency of the retrieval process, and help eliminate certain 
    security problems attendant to the storage of paper records. 
    Nevertheless, given the importance these original records continue to 
    play in the futures industry, the Commission believes that it would be 
    imprudent to rely solely on electronic versions of these records at 
    this time. Although the SEC permitted electronic storage of these 
    documents, it recognized the need for caution in this area and rested 
    its decision to eliminate the requirement that recordkeepers maintain 
    originals largely on the diminished role such written records play due 
    to the prevalence of electronic order routing in the securities 
    industry.\19\
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        \19\ 62 FR 6471.
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        Review of written trading records for differences in the instrument 
    used to record apparently contemporaneous information remains a regular 
    feature of investigations focusing on potential trade practice or 
    allocation violations.\20\ FOC contended that current technology can 
    produce superb reproductions that make differences in hand writing and 
    time stamps clearly visible. Even if we assume this to be true,\21\ 
    this argument does not address the full range of material information 
    Commission auditors and investigators may gather by examining original 
    written trading records. For example, the Commission's Division of 
    Enforcement often examines these records in the context of a variety of 
    alleged violations.\22\ If only electronically stored records were 
    available, errors in the scanning process, such as failing to process 
    information on
    
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    both sides of a written order ticket, would deprive investigators of 
    material information. Moreover, even properly scanned records could 
    deprive investigators of currently available information. For example, 
    it is unlikely that investigators could distinguish ink colors on 
    scanned documents or detect either erasure or the use of products such 
    as white out. This type of discrepancy may be important in establishing 
    that a participant in the transaction inserted some information on a 
    trading card or order ticket after the bulk of the information had 
    already been recorded.\23\
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        \20\ Indeed, Commission precedent indicates that such 
    differences--usually detected by noting differences in the color of 
    the ink on the document--can play an important evidentiary role in 
    cases raising trade practice allegations. See In re Russo, [Current 
    Transfer Binder] Comm. Fut. L. Rep. (CCH) 27,133 at 45,303 n. 9 
    (CFTC Aug. 20, 1997).
        \21\ FOC submitted reproductions of two order tickets in support 
    of its contention. The limited nature of FOC's sample raises 
    significant questions about the validity of the broad inference it 
    draws. Moreover, the information recorded on the order tickets is 
    displayed in black and white. Aside from these limitations, FOC's 
    comment does not address even straight-forward implementation 
    problems such as ensuring that all material information is scanned 
    and stored--including time stamps and written information on the 
    back of order tickets.
        \22\ Such violations include wash trading, accommodation 
    trading, direct or indirect trading ahead of or against customer 
    orders, offsetting or matching customer orders, unauthorized 
    trading, and inappropriate trade allocation.
        \23\ For example, if information about the price, quantity and 
    contract is recorded on a written order ticket in one color ink, and 
    the number designating the identity of the customer is written in a 
    different color ink, an investigator might suspect that the trade 
    was allocated to a customer after it was executed and search for 
    additional indications that orders were being improperly allocated.
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        Many commenters offered support for a compromise position suggested 
    by the FIA. Under this proposal, original written trading records would 
    be retained for one year. During this period, the written trading 
    records would be stored on ``high-quality micrographic or electronic 
    storage media that are reasonably able to detect alterations.'' \24\ 
    After the initial year, recordkeepers would be free to destroy original 
    written trading records and to fulfill their obligations under 
    Regulation 1.31 by producing reproductions of the stored records.
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        \24\ FIA Comment at 5. FIA indicates that the Commission could 
    maintain a check on the quality of available reproductions by 
    publishing a list of acceptable media or permitting recordkeepers to 
    seek Commission approval of a particular record storage medium or 
    system.
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        The FIA proposal rests on an assumption that is not necessarily 
    correct. According to FIA, the experience of futures exchanges 
    indicates that auditors or compliance investigators generally request 
    access to written trading documents within one year of their creation. 
    FIA's implicit assumption is that there is no practical need to retain 
    original written trading documents for more than a year because the 
    experience of Commission auditors and investigators is fully consistent 
    with their exchange counterparts.
        The Commission's experience with audits and investigations 
    indicates that there is no reliable basis for predicting the period of 
    time that any particular original written trading record will be 
    needed. For example, investigations of trade practice allegations are 
    frequently lengthy due to both the complexity of the underlying 
    transactions and efforts by many participants to disguise their intent 
    in entering the transactions. Information may not come to the 
    Commission's attention within a year of the wrongdoing, and the 
    suspicious activity often spans more than a one-year period. Moreover, 
    review of written trading records from a multi-year period may reveal 
    the type of pattern of suspicious trading that facilitates prosecution 
    of trade practice violations.\25\
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        \25\ Participants in a suspicious transaction often seek to 
    undermine the significance of suspicious circumstances by claiming 
    that they are the product of peculiar market forces at the time of 
    the challenged transactions. Proof that the participants have been 
    involved in a pattern of suspicious transactions undertaken under 
    varying market conditions over a period of months or years is often 
    the most effective rebuttal to such a claim.
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        Given the legitimate needs of its auditors and investigators, the 
    Commission cannot endorse the one-year retention period proposed by 
    FIA. Nevertheless, the Commission is modifying staff audit and 
    investigative practices in order to permit recordkeepers to take 
    advantage of some of the benefits of electronic storage technology, yet 
    protect the Commission's interest in maintaining access to original 
    trading records. Under the revised practice, if a recordkeeper chooses 
    to transfer trading cards and customer order tickets to electronic 
    media, a recordkeeper initially may respond to a request for written 
    trading cards and order tickets by producing reproductions maintained 
    on electronic storage media unless the staff request specifically 
    provides to the contrary. Staff generally will review these 
    reproductions prior to requesting production of original written 
    trading cards or order tickets.\26\ If this review confirms that 
    further investigation or examination of original trading records is 
    unwarranted, the recordkeeper's original trading cards and order 
    tickets may remain in storage.
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        \26\ If staff is at a point in its review that indicates a 
    request for original written trading records is inevitable, it need 
    not waste either its own or the recordkeeper's resources by 
    initially requesting reproductions.
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        While recordkeepers transferring original written trading documents 
    to electronic storage media will incur some additional costs, they also 
    may obtain substantial benefits from this change in policy. For 
    example, recordkeepers should be able to reduce retrieval costs, to 
    locate requested records more expeditiously, and to improve the 
    security of their stored original records.\27\ Commission auditors and 
    investigators should also benefit by obtaining more expeditious and 
    complete responses to their requests. Of course, the success of this 
    process will depend on the ability of recordkeepers not only to select 
    electronic storage systems that will produce high quality 
    reproductions, but also to manage the implementation challenges likely 
    to arise in transitioning from a paper-based system properly. In 
    addition, Commission experience with recordkeepers who choose to make 
    records available on electronic storage media pursuant to this policy 
    should provide a basis for reassessing the continued need for retention 
    of original trading cards and order tickets.\28\
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        \27\ For example, if access to stored original records is rarely 
    necessary, it will be less likely that records will be lost or 
    misplaced in the process of locating requested records.
        \28\ Implementation of this policy change does not require any 
    revision to the rules. By holding out the prospect of reduced 
    retrieval costs, the policy encourages recordkeepers to begin the 
    transition to electronic storage systems that promise greater 
    efficiency and security. Nevertheless, recordkeepers will still be 
    obliged to maintain the original version of trading cards, documents 
    on which trade information is originally recorded in writing, and 
    written orders required to be kept pursuant to Commission Regulation 
    1.35(a), (a-1)(1), (a-1)(2) and (d) for five years and to produce 
    those records in response to a request by an appropriate Commission 
    representative.
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    B. Timeliness of Responses to Production Requests
    
        Under current requirements, original records must be produced 
    ``promptly'' and reproductions stored on micrographic media or optical 
    disk must be produced ``immediately.'' Some commenters believed that 
    ``immediately'' is an unduly vague standard. Commenters also emphasized 
    that this standard does not acknowledge the relevance of practical 
    circumstances that can delay production by even cooperative 
    recordkeepers. Thus, many commenters urged the Commission to require 
    that both original records and reproductions stored on micrographic or 
    electronic storage media be produced ``promptly.''
        There is no evidence that the current dual production standard has 
    created any practical problems. While the rule grants Commission staff 
    broad discretion in determining when specified records should be 
    produced, none of the commenters has claimed that Commission staff have 
    abused this discretion by establishing arbitrary deadlines that ignored 
    relevant circumstances.\29\ Indeed, FIA's
    
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    comment stated that Commission staff ``typically exhibits flexibility 
    when requesting documents to accommodate practical considerations.\30\
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        \29\ The current standards do not describe a level of timeliness 
    that staff auditors and investigators must invariably demand from 
    recordkeepers. Indeed, Commission representatives frequently tailor 
    the deadline applicable to a particular document request in light of 
    the scope and nature of the request, as well as unusual or 
    unforeseen circumstances affecting a recordkeeper's ability to 
    respond quickly or completely. Nonetheless, because delay in the 
    production of required records can sometimes represent an undue 
    threat to the public interest, Regulation 1.31 grants Commission 
    representatives the discretion to specify production deadlines 
    sufficient to address such threats.
        \30\ FIA Comment at 8.
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        The ``immediately'' standard provides recordkeepers with notice of 
    the highest level of timeliness Commission representatives may demand 
    in seeking production. As indicated in the Proposal, Regulation 1.31 
    requires that reproductions stored on micrographic or electronic 
    storage media be produced ``immediately'' rather than ``promptly'' 
    because, in general, it is easier to locate and to produce such 
    reproductions than to locate and to produce original records. The dual 
    standards make it clear that Commission auditors and investigators are 
    authorized to demand that reproductions be produced more quickly than 
    original records. At the same time, they require auditors and 
    investigators to weigh a recordkeeper's potentially more limited 
    ability to locate and produce original records in establishing a 
    deadline for their production.
        The Commission recognizes that applicable deadlines should reflect 
    an evaluation of factors such as the volume of documents covered by a 
    request, competing requests from other regulators, or unusual and 
    unforeseeable circumstances that prevent the recordkeeper from 
    accessing electronically controlled records. Staff discretion, however, 
    plays a necessary role in an effective production process, and there is 
    no indication that staff has failed to exercise their discretion 
    sensibly.\31\ On the current record, there is no basis for imposing 
    further limitations on the discretion exercised by Commission auditors 
    and investigators.
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        \31\ One commenter indicated that the production process under 
    Regulation 1.31 should be modeled on the discovery process in an 
    adjudicatory proceeding. The Regulation 1.31 process, however, is 
    specifically designed to avoid both the delay and diversion of 
    resources common to such an adversarial process. As a result, 
    Regulation 1.31 does not provide that a response can be delayed 
    until a recordkeeper's counsel has had an opportunity to review 
    requested records. Nor does it establish a process for settling 
    objections over issues such as breadth or relevance. Moreover, 
    recordkeepers are expected to manage their affairs in a manner that 
    permits them to fulfill the duties described in Regulation 1.31. For 
    example, recordkeepers using micrographic or electronic storage 
    systems are expected to retain a sufficient number of expert 
    personnel to meet their regulatory responsibilities. The absence of 
    a single individual due to sickness or vacation should not make it 
    impossible for the recordkeeper to make an immediate response to an 
    auditor's or investigator's request in the infrequent circumstance 
    when immediacy is a critical component of the request, e.g. in a 
    financial crisis or where customer positions or other assets are at 
    risk.
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    C. Retention of a Consultant
    
        As noted above, the Proposal, like the SEC rules, required 
    recordkeepers who stored all required records or all of a particular 
    class of required records solely on electronic storage media to enter 
    into an arrangement with a third-party Technical Consultant.\32\ 
    Commenters criticized this aspect of the Proposal for imposing a costly 
    burden that will discourage transition to electronic storage systems. 
    Commenters also argued that this safeguard will threaten the 
    confidentiality of information maintained by recordkeepers.
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        \32\ Such recordkeepers must provide the Technical Consultant 
    with access to the storage media containing their required records, 
    and the Technical Consultant must (1) have the ability to download 
    information from the recordkeeper's storage media to any medium 
    acceptable under Regulation 1.31 and (2) undertake to provide 
    Commission representatives with access to the records stored on the 
    recordkeeper's storage media including, as appropriate, arrangement 
    for downloading the records in the format designated by Commission 
    representatives.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The Commission has decided to adopt this aspect of the Proposal 
    without change. The SEC has required this type of safeguard since 
    1993.\33\ A significant number of Commission registrants are subject to 
    the SEC's recordkeeping requirements, and none of the comments on the 
    Proposal describes any problems with the implementation of this 
    safeguard under the SEC's rules. Recordkeepers are only required to 
    enter an arrangement with a Technical Consultant if they choose to 
    store all required records or all of a particular class of required 
    records solely on electronic storage media. As a result, recordkeepers 
    may protect themselves from costs related to retaining a Technical 
    Consultant by maintaining backup copies of electronically stored 
    records in either a hard copy or micrographic version. As to 
    confidentiality concerns relating to a Technical Consultant's access to 
    required records, recordkeepers may protect themselves by entering into 
    appropriate confidentiality agreements with their Technical 
    Consultants. In short, the objections that have been raised by 
    commenters do not establish that there are circumstances unique to the 
    futures industry that warrant a deviation from the SEC policy.\34\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \33\ As noted above, the SEC adopted this safeguard as part of 
    its 1997 rulemaking. In June 1993, however, the SEC's Division of 
    Market Regulation issued a no-action letter allowing broker-dealers 
    to utilize optical storage technology for recordkeeping under 
    certain conditions. The availability of a third-party backup was one 
    of the conditions to this relief. See Letter from Michael A. 
    Macciaroli, Associate Director, Division of Market Regulation, SEC 
    to Michael D. Udoff, Chairman, Ad Hoc Record Retention Committee, 
    Securities Industry Association (June 18, 1993), 1993 WL 246230 
    (SEC).
        \34\ The Commission does not intend that Commission 
    investigators or auditors regularly seek required records from 
    Technical Consultants. Indeed, staff will only seek performance of 
    the Technical Consultant's undertaking with the Commission when the 
    recordkeeper itself has shown that it is unable or unwilling to meet 
    its regulatory obligations.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    D. Production on Commission Compatible Machine-Readable Media
    
        The Proposal required recordkeepers using electronic storage media 
    to provide copies of requested records on Commission compatible 
    machine-readable media (as defined by Commission Regulation 15.00(l)) 
    \35\ with the format and coding structure specified in the request. Two 
    commenters stated that neither the Proposal nor Regulation 15.00(l) 
    provides adequate notice of either the range of media that the 
    Commission will deem compatible or the range of formats and coding 
    structures that may be required. In response to these comments, the 
    Commission has decided to provide guidance about the intent underlying 
    this provision and to direct staff to take steps to provide 
    recordkeepers with ongoing notice of the applicable requirements.\36\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \35\ Commission Regulation 15.00(l) provides that the term 
    compatible data processing media means: [D]ata processing media 
    approved by the Commission or its designee. The rule delegates the 
    Commission's approval authority to the Executive Director and 
    provides that the Executive Director may designate employees to 
    exercise the approval authority on her behalf.
        \36\ When the Commission amended Regulation 15.00(l) in 1997, it 
    deleted references to specific media in light of comments suggesting 
    that a regulatory definition was impractical because electronic 
    media are evolving at such a rapid pace. 62 FR 24026, 24028 (May 2, 
    1997).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The requirement that recordkeepers provide documents to the 
    Commission in one of the many identified formats arises out of 
    practical limitations on the Commission's ability to process data 
    stored in the full range of available formats and coding structures on 
    the full range of storage media available to recordkeepers. The 
    Commission uses standard desktop tools including Microsoft Office 
    Professional 97. Recordkeepers using storage systems with compatible 
    format and coding structures should not experience significant problems 
    providing Commission auditors and investigators with acceptable 
    machine-readable media. Records that include data files and images will 
    be acceptable if accompanied by appropriate
    
    [[Page 28740]]
    
    information.\37\ Where the records are from a relational data base 
    management system, the Commission would prefer that the recordkeeper 
    convert the records to an acceptable data file format. Under 
    appropriate conditions, however, the Commission will also accept such 
    records in another format.\38\ Where the records are from a different 
    source, providers will need to coordinate with the Commission to 
    determine acceptability.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \37\ For records that include data files, the required 
    information includes:
        (1) how to identify individual records and record types;
        (2) how to identify individual fields within records;
        (3) how the individual fields and record types are defined; and
        (4) the format of each quantitative field and the meaning of 
    each field value for other fields.
        For records that include images, the required information 
    includes:
        (1) how any data files are linked to images;
        (2) how to identify individual images; and
        (3) the format of the images.
        The Commission uses ``Wang Imaging for Windows 95.'' The 
    Commission will accept images in another format if:
        (1) software is provided with the records that makes it feasible 
    to view and print the images;
        (2) this software will run under Windows NT or Windows 95/98;
        (3) this software can be freely provided to the Commission under 
    the terms of the provider's licensing agreements with the concerned 
    software vendor(s); and
        (4) information is provided on how individual images can be 
    accessed.
        \38\ The applicable conditions include:
        (1) the records are accompanied by software that makes it 
    feasible to access the records using standard office tools,
        (2) this software will run under Windows NT or Windows 95/98,
        (3) this software can be freely provided to the Commission under 
    the terms of the provider's licensing agreements with the concerned 
    software vendor(s),
        (4) information is provided on how the individual fields and 
    record types are defined, and
        (5) information is provided on the format of each quantitative 
    field and the meaning of each field value for other fields.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Recordkeepers can provide information to the Commission on a number 
    of different media. Clearly, a small file can be placed on a diskette 
    or set of diskettes. CD-ROM, 4mm tape, 30 GB DLT tape, nine-track tape 
    and IBM 3490 cartridge tapes are also acceptable. Absent security 
    concerns, email attachments and FTP transmitted files are acceptable. 
    Providers will need to coordinate with the Commission if different 
    media are contemplated.
        Of course the Commission's capabilities in this regard will change 
    over time. To provide affected recordkeepers with continuous notice of 
    what is currently acceptable, the Commission is modifying current staff 
    practice to require preparation of an updated list of formats and 
    coding structures as changes are made. Notice of any changes to the 
    list will be available both in writing and on the Commission's web 
    page, and an updated list will be published in the Federal Register.
    
    E. Waiver of Privilege
    
        Consistent with current Commission requirements, the Proposal 
    provided that recordkeepers employing micrographic or electronic 
    storage systems must agree to waive any privilege, claim of 
    confidentiality or other objection to the disclosure of non-Commission-
    required records stored on the same individual medium as Commission-
    required documents. Some commenters characterized this approach as 
    inflexible and urged the Commission to adopt an approach modeled on ABA 
    Op. No. 92-368 (Standing Committee on Ethics and Professional 
    Responsibility, Nov. 10, 1992).\39\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \39\ In that opinion, the American Bar Association Standing 
    Committee on Ethics and Professional Responsibility addressed 
    circumstances in which an attorney inadvertently sends another 
    lawyer privileged or otherwise confidential materials belonging to 
    an opposing party. The committee found that a lawyer receiving such 
    confidential material has a professional obligation, when he or she 
    recognizes opposing counsel's error, to avoid further review of the 
    material. The committee also concluded that the affected lawyer 
    should notify opposing counsel of the error and follow counsel's 
    directions as to the disposition of the material.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The Commission has decided that the waiver language should be 
    deleted from Regulation 1.31. While courts are not in agreement about 
    the proper application of the ``inadvertent waiver'' theory discussed 
    in the ABA's Opinion, the Commission does not believe that a 
    recordkeeper should be precluded by rule from raising a question about 
    privilege if a privileged document has been inadvertently stored and/or 
    produced on the same medium as Commission-required documents.\40\ In an 
    effort to avoid this problem, the deleted waiver language will be 
    replaced with the current Commission requirement that recordkeepers 
    store Commission-required records on a separate individual medium from 
    non-Commission-required records. Waiver, however, will no longer be a 
    mandatory consequence of failing to fulfill this segregation 
    requirement, at least by operation of regulation.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \40\ As is currently the case with all Commission-required 
    records, recordkeepers may not deny authorized Commission 
    representatives access to any individual storage medium that 
    includes Commission-required records or delay production while the 
    individual storage medium is reviewed for the presence of privileged 
    material. The final rule merely eliminates the regulatory inference 
    that the commingling of Commission-required records with non-
    Commissioned-required records necessarily amounts to a waiver of any 
    privilege otherwise covering the latter category of records.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    F. Other Issues
    
    1. Generic standards
        Several commenters urged the Commission to adopt generic standards 
    of accessibility, security, and reliability that do not distinguish 
    between original records and eligible substitutes. One of the commodity 
    industry associations argued that the adoption of generic performance 
    standards would increase flexibility and decrease the likelihood that 
    the applicable standards would become ``outdated'' due to continued 
    technological developments. One exchange commenter claimed that such a 
    unitary approach would ensure consistency and lessen confusion.
        A generic approach may have certain advantages in an area likely to 
    be affected by rapid technological change. Some comments on the 
    Proposal, however, illustrate the weaknesses of any approach that fails 
    to provide sufficiently specific notice of the procedures the 
    Commission considers necessary to a reliable system of records. These 
    comments suggest that, absent specific guidance, many industry 
    participants would interpret their recordkeeping duties in a manner the 
    Commission views as incompatible with the public interest.\41\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \41\ FOC argued that any required record should be deemed 
    accessible if produced within 10 days. One commodity industry 
    association noted that Regulation 1.31 does not include any 
    requirements for the security and integrity of paper records and 
    argued that firms have no duty to supervise the security and 
    reliability of hard copy records under the generic standard set 
    forth in Commission Regulation 166.3. One exchange commenter 
    indicated that it would be burdensome to require recordkeepers to 
    maintain an accurate and complete index of records stored on 
    micrographic or electronic storage media.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        More importantly, none of the commentators that urged adoption of 
    more generic standards offered the type of specific proposal that would 
    permit the Commission to make a reasoned evaluation of the practical 
    costs and benefits of a more generic approach. Indeed, none of the 
    commenters cited to generic standards adopted by a state or federal 
    regulatory body with responsibilities comparable to those the CEA 
    entrusts to the Commission. The absence of any specific proposals may 
    be a product of the futures industry's limited experience with the 
    design or implementation of large-scale electronic storage systems.\42\ 
    We emphasize that
    
    [[Page 28741]]
    
    movement toward more generic standards may well be appropriate as 
    industry experience and expertise develop. Indeed, as part of its 
    ongoing evaluation of developments warranting additional amendments to 
    its recordkeeping requirements, the Commission encourages the 
    submission of specific proposals for generic standards that both 
    provide recordkeepers with the flexibility necessary to maximize the 
    cost reduction and time savings available from improved storage 
    technology and ensure that Commission auditors and investigators 
    maintain timely access to a reliable system of records.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \42\ Even if the capabilities of electronic storage systems meet 
    the high expectations of their proponents, the Commission expects 
    that the transition process from paper-based systems to electronic-
    based systems will involve implementation problems requiring 
    significant adjustments. If the security, reliability, and 
    accessibility of the recordkeeping process are to be protected 
    during this period of learning and adjustment, it is important that 
    recordkeepers have clear notice of their ongoing obligations under 
    Regulation 1.31. It is equally important that recordkeepers keep the 
    Commission informed of the experience gained during this period so 
    that the Commission can develop a reliable basis for making 
    necessary adjustments to its rules.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    2. Format of Storage Media
        One exchange commenter noted that one of the Proposal's four 
    characteristics for defining electronic storage media could be 
    misconstrued as requiring that the storage system itself exclusively 
    preserve records in a non-rewritable, non-erasable format. It suggests 
    that such an interpretation could disqualify CD-ROM storage systems 
    with rewritable CD-ROM capabilities. The Commission agrees that the 
    medium, not the storage system itself, must exclusively preserve 
    records in a non-rewritable, non-erasable format.
    3. Escrow Agreements
        Two exchange commenters opposed the Proposal's requirement that 
    recordkeepers using electronic storage media keep available for 
    inspection all information necessary to access records and indexes 
    maintained on electronic storage media or, in the alternative, place 
    such information in escrow and, as necessary, update the information. 
    These commenters raised the possibility that third-party vendors may be 
    unwilling to enter into source code escrow agreements. As noted in the 
    Proposal, however, such escrow agreements are a common feature of 
    software licensing agreements. There is no indication that the similar 
    safeguard in the SEC's rules has resulted in problems with third-party 
    vendors. Given the speculative nature of the information provided by 
    the commenters, modification of this safeguard is not warranted.
    4. Written Procedures
        Several commenters objected to the Proposal's requirement that 
    electronic recordkeepers maintain written operational procedures and 
    controls that would provide accountability over both the initial entry 
    of required records to the electronic storage media and the entry of 
    each change made to any such records. As noted in the Proposal, the 
    Commission believes that all recordkeepers must have and enforce 
    procedures to keep their required records from being altered or 
    destroyed.\43\ The Proposal's specific requirements for electronic 
    storage systems reflect the special security/integrity concerns that 
    attend the transition process from paper-based recordkeeping systems. 
    While experience may prove these special precautions unnecessary, the 
    arguments raised by the commenters do not warrant their deletion at 
    this time.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \43\ Proposal at 30672.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    5. Adjusting Requirements in Response to Technological Change
        Several commenters noted that some of the Proposal's requirements 
    may quickly become outdated due to rapid developments in the technology 
    underlying electronic storage media. These commenters observed that 
    addressing the necessary adjustments through the rulemaking process may 
    prove unduly slow, costly and inflexible.
        The rulemaking process can play an important role in identifying 
    and removing such obstacles. While the notice and comment process that 
    underlies rulemaking can result in limited delays, this process helps 
    ensure that the Commission's deliberations are informed by the 
    perspectives of a broad range of interested parties. Moreover, as in 
    this instance, the rulemaking process can play an important rule in 
    harmonizing the approach different regulators take to common areas of 
    concern, thereby minimizing the regulatory burden imposed on firms 
    subject to dual regulation.
        The Commission has adequate tools to address short-term 
    inefficiencies in the regulatory process. On several occasions during 
    the past two years, the Commission has provided interim relief from the 
    current requirements of Rule 1.31 to Commission registrants using 
    advanced technology.\44\ This relief has helped minimize obstacles to 
    the adoption of new technology while the Commission addressed the need 
    for final amendments to Rule 1.31. If circumstances warrant, similar 
    relief can be made available in the future.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \44\ The Commission has permitted these registrants to 
    substitute compliance with the SEC's recordkeeping requirements for 
    compliance with the current requirements of Rule 1.31. See note 2, 
    supra.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    IV. Related Matters
    
    A. Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
        The Regulatory Flexibility Act (``RFA''), 5 U.S.C. 601, et seq., 
    611, requires that, in adopting rules and regulations, all federal 
    agencies consider their impact on small entities. In accordance with 
    Section 601(3) of the RFA, the Commission published a ``Policy 
    Statement of Definitions of Small Entities for Purposes of the 
    Regulatory Flexibility Act,'' 47 FR 18618 (Apr. 30, 1982). In that 
    statement,\45\ the Commission indicated that some classes of persons 
    were excluded from the definition of small entities. These include: 
    futures commission merchants registered or required to be registered; 
    floor brokers employed by registered futures commission merchants; 
    commodity pool operators registered or required to be registered; and 
    large traders in the futures market. The Commission considers other 
    entities to be small under particular facts and circumstances. These 
    include: futures commission merchants exempt from registration; 
    commodity pool operators exempt from registration; introducing brokers; 
    floor brokers not employed by futures commission merchants; floor 
    traders; and commodity trading advisors. Because the rules discussed 
    herein will affect the full spectrum of Commission registrants, it is 
    likely that small entities within the meaning of the RFA will be 
    affected.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \45\ The Commission subsequently clarified some of the 
    definitions See 48 FR 35276 (Aug. 3, 1983); 55 FR 13550 (Apr. 11, 
    1990); 58 FR 40347 (Jul. 28, 1993).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The final rules would generally expand the category of record 
    storage systems permissible under the Commission's rules. The 
    Commission anticipates that these rules will increase small entities' 
    freedom to tailor their record storage systems to the overall needs of 
    their businesses. The final rules will have no impact on a small entity 
    chooses to maintain a paper-based record storage system. However, if a 
    small entity chooses to use micrographic storage media, it may incur 
    costs related to creation of the duplicate record and storage at a 
    location separate from the micrographic record. Costs can be reduced by 
    moving the hard copies of the records to a separate location.
    
    [[Page 28742]]
    
        The final rules will permit small entities that choose to use 
    electronic storage media for their storage record systems to select 
    systems that may be less costly and simpler to manage. The final rules 
    will impose limited additional burdens on these entities, including 
    requirements that the recordkeeper: (1) provide a representation that 
    the system meets pertinent regulatory requirements prior to converting 
    to an electronic storage system; (2) create a duplicate of both 
    required records and an index of those records and maintain the 
    duplicate at a separate location; (3) create and maintain an audit 
    system for transferring records to electronic storage media; (4) take 
    steps to ensure Commission access to information necessary to download 
    records from the electronic storage media; and (5) provide an 
    independent source for the downloading of records that are maintained 
    solely on electronic storage media. The Commission anticipates that 
    small entities will not convert their recordkeeping systems to 
    electronic storage media unless the accompanying burdens are outweighed 
    by the financial savings and operational efficiency that would result 
    from the change to electronic storage media.
        The Chairperson, 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.
    
    B. Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        When publishing final rules, the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 
    \46\ (``PRA'') imposes certain requirements on federal agencies 
    (including the Commission) in connection with their conducting or 
    sponsoring any collection of information as defined by the PRA. In 
    compliance with the PRA, these final rules and/or their associated 
    information collection requirement inform the public of:
    
        \46\ Pub. L. 104-13 (May 13, 1995).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        (1) The reasons the information is planned to be and/or has been 
    collected; (2) the way such information is planned to be and/or has 
    been used to further the proper performance of the functions of the 
    agency; (3) an estimate, to the extent practicable, of the average 
    burden of the collection (together with a request that the public 
    direct to the agency any comments concerning the accuracy of this 
    burden estimate and any suggestions for reducing this burden); (4) 
    whether responses to the collection of information are voluntary, 
    required to obtain or retain a benefit or mandatory; (5) the nature 
    and extent of confidentiality to be provided, if any; and (6) the 
    fact that an agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not 
    required to respond to, a collection of information unless it 
    displays a current valid OMB control number.
    
        The Commission previously submitted these rules in proposed form 
    and their associated information collection requirement to the Office 
    of Management and Budget. The Office of Management and Budget approved 
    the collection of information associated with these rules on October 
    24, 1998, and assigned OMB control number 3038-0022, Rules Pertaining 
    to Contract Markets and Their Members, to these rules. The burden 
    associated with this entire collection 3038-0022, including these final 
    rule amendments, is as follows:
        Average burden hours per response: 3,609,89.
        Number of respondents: 15,893.
        Frequency of response: On occasion.
        The burden associated with the final rule amendments, is as 
    follows:
        Average burden hours per response: 17.50
        Number of respondents: 3,412.
        Frequency of response: On occasion.
        Persons wishing to comment on the information required by these 
    final rules should contact the Desk Officer, CFTC, Office of Management 
    and Budget, Room 10202, NEOB, Washington, DC 20503, (202) 395-7340. 
    Copies of the information collection submission to OMB are available 
    from the CFTC Clearance Officer, 1155 21st Street N.W., Washington, DC 
    20581, (202) 418-5160.
    
    List of Subjects in 17 CFR Part 1
    
        Recordkeeping requirements.
    
        Accordingly, 17 CFR part 1 is amended 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, 24.
    
        2. Section 1.31 is amended by revising paragraphs (b), (c), and (d) 
    to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 1.31  Books and records; keeping and inspection.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) Except as provided in paragraph (d) of this section, immediate 
    reproductions on either ``micrographic media'' (as defined in paragraph 
    (b)(1)(i) of this section) or ``electronic storage media'' (as defined 
    in paragraph (b)(1)(ii) this section) may be kept in that form for the 
    required time period under the conditions set forth in this paragraph 
    (b).
        (1) For purposes of this section:
        (i) The term ``micrographic media'' means microfilm or microfiche 
    or any similar medium.
        (ii) The term ``electronic storage media'' means any digital 
    storage medium or system that:
        (A) Preserves the records exclusively in a non-rewritable, non-
    erasable format;
        (B) Verifies automatically the quality and accuracy of the storage 
    media recording process;
        (C) Serializes the original and, if applicable, duplicate units of 
    storage media and creates a time-date record for the required period of 
    retention for the information placed on such electronic storage media; 
    and
        (D) Permits the immediate downloading of indexes and records 
    preserved on the electronic storage media onto paper, microfilm, 
    microfiche or other medium acceptable under this paragraph upon the 
    request of representatives of the Commission or the Department of 
    Justice.
        (2) Persons who use either micrographic media or electronic storage 
    media to maintain records in accordance with this section must:
        (i) Have available at all times, for examination by representatives 
    of the Commission or the Department of Justice, facilities for 
    immediate, easily readable projection or production of micrographic 
    media or electronic storage media images;
        (ii) Be ready at all times to provide, and immediately provide at 
    the expense of the person required to keep such records, any easily 
    readable hard-copy image that representatives of the Commission or 
    Department of Justice may request;
        (iii) Keep only Commission-require records on the individual medium 
    employed (e.g., a disk or sheets of microfiche);
        (iv) Store a duplicate of the record, in any medium acceptable 
    under this regulation, at a location separate from the original for the 
    period of time required for maintenance of the original; and
        (v) Organize and maintain an accurate index of all information 
    maintained on both the original and duplicate storage media such that:
        (A) The location of any particular record stored on the media may 
    be immediately ascertained;
        (B) The index is available at all times for immediate examination 
    by
    
    [[Page 28743]]
    
    representatives of the Commission or the Department of Justice;
        (C) A duplicate of the index is stored at a location separate from 
    the original index; and
        (D) Both the original index and the duplicate index are preserved 
    for the time period required for the records included in the index.
        (3) In addition to the foregoing conditions, persons using 
    electronic storage media must:
        (i) Be ready at all times to provide, and immediately provide at 
    the expense of the person required to keep such records, copies of such 
    records on such approved machine-readable media as defined in 
    Sec. 15.00(1) of this chapter which any representative of the 
    Commission or the Department of Justice may request. Records must use a 
    format and coding structure specified in the request.
        (ii) Develop and maintain written operational procedures and 
    controls (an ``audit system'') designed to provide accountability over 
    both the initial entry of required records to the electronic storage 
    media and the entry of each change made to any original or duplicate 
    record maintained on the electronic storage media such that:
        (A) The results of such audit system are available at all times for 
    immediate examination by representatives of the Commission or the 
    Department of Justice;
        (B) The results of such audit system are preserved for the time 
    period required for the records maintained on the electronic storage 
    media; and
        (C) The written operational procedures and controls are available 
    at all times for immediate examination by representatives of the 
    Commission or the Department of Justice.
        (iii) Either
        (A) Maintain, keep current, and make available at all times for 
    immediate examination by representatives of the Commission or 
    Department of Justice all information necessary to access records and 
    indexes maintained on the electronic storage media; or
        (B) Place in escrow and keep current a copy of the physical and 
    logical format of the electronic storage media, the file format of all 
    different information types maintained on the electronic storage media 
    and the source code, documentation, and information necessary to access 
    the records and indexes maintained on the electronic storage media.
        (4) In addition to the foregoing conditions, any person who uses 
    only electronic storage media to preserve some or all of its required 
    records (``Electronic Recordkeeper'') shall, prior to the media's use, 
    enter into an arrangement with at least one third party technical 
    consultant (``Technical Consultant'') who has the technical and 
    financial capability to perform the undertakings described in this 
    paragraph (b)(4). The arrangement shall provide that the Technical 
    Consultant will have access to, and the ability to download, 
    information from the Electronic Recordkeeper's electronic storage media 
    to any medium acceptable under this regulation.
        (i) The Technical Consultant must file with the Commission an 
    undertaking in a form acceptable to the Commission, signed by the 
    Technical Consultant or a person duly authorized by the Technical 
    Consultant. An acceptable undertaking must include the following 
    provision with respect to the Electronic Recordkeeper:
    
        With respect to any books and records maintained or preserved on 
    behalf of the Electronic Recordkeeper, the undersigned hereby 
    undertakes to furnish promptly to any representative of the United 
    States Commodity Futures Trading Commission or the United States 
    Department of Justice (the ``Representative''), upon reasonable 
    request, such information as is deemed necessary by the 
    Representative to download information kept on the Electronic 
    Recordkeeper's electronic storage media to any medium acceptable 
    under 17 CFR 1.31. The undersigned also undertakes to take 
    reasonable steps to provide access to information contained on the 
    Electronic Recordkeeper's electronic storage media, including, as 
    appropriate, arrangements for the downloading of any record required 
    to be maintained under the Commodity Exchange Act or the rules, 
    regulations, or orders of the United States Commodity Futures 
    Trading Commission, in a format acceptable to the Representative. In 
    the event the Electronic Recordkeeper fails to download a record 
    into a readable format and after reasonable notice to the Electronic 
    Recordkeeper, upon being provided with the appropriate electronic 
    storage medium, the undersigned will undertake to do so, at no 
    charge to the United States, as the Representative may request.
    
        (ii) [Reserved]
        (c) Persons employing an electronic storage system shall provide a 
    representation to the Commission prior to the initial use of the 
    system. The representation shall be made by the person required to 
    maintain the records, the storage system vendor, or another third party 
    with appropriate expertise and shall state that the selected electronic 
    storage system meets the requirements set forth in paragraph (b)(1)(ii) 
    of this section. Persons employing an electronic storage system using 
    media other than optical disk or CD-ROM technology shall so state. The 
    representation shall be accompanied by the type of oath or affirmation 
    described in Sec. 1.10(d)(4).
        (d) Trading cards, documents on which trade information is 
    originally recorded in writing, and written orders required to be kept 
    pursuant to Sec. 1.35(a), (a-1)(1), (a-1)(2) and (d) must be retained 
    in hard-copy for the required time period.
    
        Issued in Washington, DC on May 21, 1999 by the Commission.
    Jean A. Webb,
    Secretary of the Commission.
    [FR Doc. 99-13514 Filed 5-26-99; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6351-01-M
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
6/28/1999
Published:
05/27/1999
Department:
Commodity Futures Trading Commission
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rules.
Document Number:
99-13514
Dates:
June 28, 1999.
Pages:
28735-28743 (9 pages)
PDF File:
99-13514.pdf
CFR: (2)
17 CFR 15.00(1)
17 CFR 1.31