Exam Alert: FINRA Revises ADF Market Participant Registration Rules

Effective February 3, 2014, FINRA has implemented changes to the requirements for registering as an Alternative Display Facility (ADF) market participant. An applying firm must now agree to submit an ADF Deposit Amount, execute a Participant Agreement with FINRA, and execute a Certification Record. Continue reading

Effective February 3, 2014, FINRA has implemented changes to the requirements for registering as an Alternative Display Facility (ADF) market participant. An applying firm must now agree to submit an ADF Deposit Amount of $250,000 into escrow (raised to $500,000 under certain conditions). The firm may lose some of the deposit if they fail to submit at least 75% of its quoting or trading volume to the ADF. The firm must also provide monthly projections of the volume of data it expects to submit to the ADF.

The rule provides for ways to earn back the deposit. The rule also specifies what happens to the deposit if the firm is sold, stops doing business, or fails to become or remain an ADF market participant.

A firm seeking registration as an ADF market participant must also execute a Participant Agreement with FINRA and execute a Certification Record. The Certification Record has the firm attest that it can comply with certain requirements of Regulation NMS.

Source: FINRA Regulatory Notice 14-04: SEC Approves Amendments to FINRA Rules 6271 and 6272 Regarding the Requirements For Firms Seeking Registration as FINRA Alternative Display Facility (ADF) Market Participants

This alert applies to the Series 7, Series 55, and Series 62.

Exam Alert: SEC and CFTC define “swap,” “security-based swap,” and “mixed swap”

Effective October 12, 2012, the SEC and CFTC will put into effect rules that specify whether a given product counts as a “swap,” “security-based swap,” “mixed swap,” or none of the above. The new rules also require market participants to keep the same books and records for “security-based swap agreements” as would be required for swaps. Continue reading

Effective October 12, 2012, the SEC and CFTC will put into effect rules that specify whether a given product counts as a “swap,” “security-based swap,” “mixed swap,” or none of the above.  The new rules also require market participants to keep the same books and records for “security-based swap agreements” as would be required for swaps.

 

The CFTC regulates swaps, the SEC regulates security-based swaps, and both agencies regulate mixed swaps.  The CFTC regulates security-based swap agreements, but the SEC has antifraud authority over those products.

 

Products that are not swaps or security-based swaps include:

-insurance that falls under 1) the grandfather provision, 2) the product safe harbor, or 3) the enumerated product safe harbor

-security forwards

-consumer transactions

-commercial transactions

 

Products that are considered swaps include:

-Title VII instruments on interest rates and other monetary rates

-Title VII instruments on rates or yields of U.S. Treasuries and certain other exempt securities

-Title VII instruments on futures (other than futures on foreign government debt securities)

-broad-based index credit default swaps that require cash settlement or auction settlement

 

Products that are considered security-based swaps include:

-Title VII instruments on yields of a non-exempt debt security, loan, or narrow-based security index

-Total Return Swaps on a single security, loan, or narrow-based security index

-Title VII instruments on security futures

 

Products that are considered mixed swaps include:

-Total Return Swaps that include interest-rate optionality or a non-securities component

-broad-based index credit default swaps that require mandatory physical settlement

 

Products that may be swaps or security-based swaps:

-Title VII instruments based on futures contracts on certain foreign government debt securities

-index credit default swaps

-foreign exchange forwards

-foreign exchange swaps

-foreign currency options (other than foreign currency options traded on a national securities exchange)

-non-deliverable forward contracts involving foreign exchange

-currency and cross-currency swaps

-forward rate agreements

-contracts for differences

-certain combinations and permutations of (or options on) swaps and security-based swaps

 

Market participants may request a determination from the SEC and the CFTC of whether a product is a swap, a security-based swap, or a mixed swap.

 

Sources:

SEC Approves Rules and Interpretations on Key Terms for Regulating Derivatives (SEC Release 2012-130)

Further Definition of “Swap,” “Security-Based Swap,” and “Security-Based Swap Agreement”; Mixed Swaps; Security-Based Swap Agreement Recordkeeping (Federal Register publication)

 

This alert applies to the Series 62, Series 79, Series 99, Series 7, Series 66, and Series 65.