Memo #
31646

ICI Files Letter on CFTC Proposal Regarding Swap Execution Facilities and the Trade Execution Requirement

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[31646]

March 12, 2019 TO: ICI Members
ICI Global Members
Derivatives Markets Advisory Committee
ICI Global Trading & Markets Committee SUBJECTS: Derivatives RE: ICI Files Letter on CFTC Proposal Regarding Swap Execution Facilities and the Trade Execution Requirement

 

ICI recently filed the attached letter in response to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission’s (CFTC or “Commission”) proposed amendments to its rules governing swap execution facilities (SEFs) and the trade execution requirement for swaps.[1]

The letter supports the main goals of the proposal, namely increasing swap market transparency, reducing complexity, and promoting the trading of more swaps on SEFs. We assert, however, that the CFTC’s proposed drastic overhaul of SEF trading practices will not accomplish these goals and risks making markets more opaque, fragmented, brittle, and complex.

The letter supports the CFTC’s proposed definition of “market participant,” which we believe would improve market certainty. The CFTC’s proposed definition would include asset managers as “market participants,” while excluding the asset manager’s clients.

The letter urges the CFTC not to proceed with proposed revisions to its rules on impartial access to SEFs. We explain that the CFTC’s proposed changes to the impartial access requirements would harm buy-side market participants by reducing their access to markets, impairing liquidity, and diminishing competition. We assert that the CFTC’s proposal to grant SEFs more discretion when considering what fees to charge market participants is likely to result in disproportionately higher costs for buy-side market participants.

The letter recommends that the CFTC rethink its vast expansion of the trade execution requirement. We explain that significantly expanding the trade execution requirement, as the Commission proposes, would increase costs and diminish competition, trading liquidity, and innovation.  Rather than using its regulatory authority to force swap trading onto SEFs, we urge the CFTC to create appropriate incentives for industry participants to increase their use of SEFs and to impose the trade execution requirement on a swap only if sufficient liquidity exists on SEFs that list the swap to satisfy trading demand for the product. We further recommend that the CFTC not adopt the proposed ban on pre-execution communications for block trades to maintain liquidity in this critical portion of the market. We close by explaining that continuation of the post-trade name give-up practice for intended to be cleared swaps would exacerbate the liquidity issues that would result from the proposal.

 

Sarah A. Bessin
Associate General Counsel

George M. Gilbert
Assistant General Counsel

 

Attachment

endnotes

[1] For a summary of the proposal, please see ICI Memorandum No. 31498 (Nov. 27, 2018), available at https://www.ici.org/my_ici/memorandum/memo31498.