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    2015-05413 | CFTC

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    Federal Register, Volume 80 Issue 46 (Tuesday, March 10, 2015)  
    [Federal Register Volume 80, Number 46 (Tuesday, March 10, 2015)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 12555-12558]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 2015-05413]

    ========================================================================
    Rules and Regulations
                                                    Federal Register
    ________________________________________________________________________

    This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains regulatory documents 
    having general applicability and legal effect, most of which are keyed 
    to and codified in the Code of Federal Regulations, which is published 
    under 50 titles pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 1510.

    The Code of Federal Regulations is sold by the Superintendent of Documents. 
    Prices of new books are listed in the first FEDERAL REGISTER issue of each 
    week.

    ========================================================================

    Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 46 / Tuesday, March 10, 2015 / Rules 
    and Regulations

    [[Page 12555]]

    COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION

    17 CFR Parts 1, 3, 23, 37, 43, 45, 46, and 170

    RIN 3038-AE27

    Initial Response to District Court Remand Order in Securities 
    Industry and Financial Markets Association, et al. v. United States 
    Commodity Futures Trading Commission

    AGENCY: Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

    ACTION: Supplementation of rulemaking preambles and request for 
    comments.

    ———————————————————————–

    SUMMARY: This release is the Commodity Futures Trading Commission’s 
    (“Commission” or “CFTC”) initial response to the order of the 
    United States District Court for the District of Columbia in Securities 
    Industry and Financial Markets Association, et al. v. United States 
    Commodity Futures Trading Commission remanding eight swaps-related 
    rulemakings to the Commission to address what the court held to be 
    inadequacies in the Commission’s consideration of costs and benefits, 
    or its explanation of its consideration of costs and benefits, in those 
    rulemakings. In this release, the Commission: supplements the preambles 
    to the remanded rulemakings by clarifying that the costs and benefits 
    identified therein applied both to domestic swaps activities and 
    activities outside the United States that are subject to the 
    Commission’s swaps rules by operation of section 2(i) of the Commodity 
    Exchange Act (“CEA”); and solicits comments on whether there are 
    cross-border costs or benefits associated with the remanded rules that 
    differ from those associated with activities within the United States. 
    Following its review of the comments, the Commission will publish a 
    further response to the District Court remand order which would include 
    any supplementation of or changes to its consideration of the costs and 
    benefits of the relevant rules as set forth in the rule preambles. The 
    Commission will also consider whether to amend any of these rules in 
    light of information developed in this process.

    DATES: Comments must be received on or before May 11, 2015.

    ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by RIN 3038-AE27, by any 
    of the following methods:
         Agency Web site: http://comments.cftc.gov. Follow the 
    instructions for submitting comments through the Web site.
         Mail: Send to Christopher Kirkpatrick, Secretary of the 
    Commission, Commodity Futures Trading Commission, Three Lafayette 
    Centre, 1155 21st Street NW., Washington, DC 20581.
         Hand Delivery/Courier: Same as Mail, above.
         Federal eRulemaking Portal: http://www.regulations.gov. 
    Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
        Please submit your comments using only one of these methods.
        All comments must be submitted in English, or if not, accompanied 
    by an English translation. Comments will be posted as received to 
    www.cftc.gov. You should submit only information that you wish to make 
    available publicly. If you wish the Commission to consider information 
    that you believe is exempt from disclosure under the Freedom of 
    Information Act (“FOIA”), a petition for confidential treatment of 
    the exempt information may be submitted according to the procedures 
    established in Sec.  145.9 of the Commission’s regulations.1
    —————————————————————————

        1 17 CFR 145.9.
    —————————————————————————

        The Commission reserves the right, but shall have no obligation, to 
    review, pre-screen, filter, redact, refuse or remove any or all of your 
    submission from www.cftc.gov that it may deem to be inappropriate for 
    publication, such as obscene language. All submissions that have been 
    redacted or removed that contain comments on the merits of the 
    rulemaking will be retained in the public comment file and will be 
    considered as required under the Administrative Procedure Act and other 
    applicable laws, and may be accessible under the FOIA.

    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Rob Schwartz, Deputy General Counsel, 
    (202) 418-5958, [email protected]; Martin White, Assistant General 
    Counsel, (202) 418-5129, [email protected]; or Kavita Kumar Puri, 
    Counsel, (202) 418-5291, [email protected], in the Office of the General 
    Counsel, Commodity Futures Trading Commission, Three Lafayette Centre, 
    1151 21st Street NW., Washington, DC 20581.

    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 

    I. Overview

        This release is the Commission’s initial response to the order of 
    the United States District Court for the District of Columbia in 
    Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association, et al. v. United 
    States Commodity Futures Trading Commission, No. 13-1916 (PLF) (D.D.C. 
    September 16, 2014) 2 (“SIFMA v. CFTC”) remanding eight swaps-
    related rulemakings to the Commission to address what the court held to 
    be inadequacies in the Commission’s explanation of its consideration of 
    costs and benefits in those rulemakings. The eight remanded rulemakings 
    are:
    —————————————————————————

        2 –F. Supp. 3d–, 2014 WL 4629567 (“Op.”).
    —————————————————————————

        Real-Time Public Reporting of Swap Transactions Data 3 (“Real-
    Time Reporting Rule”)
    —————————————————————————

        3 77 FR 1182 (January 9, 2012).
    —————————————————————————

        Swap Data Recordkeeping and Reporting Requirements 4 (“SDR 
    Reporting Rule”)
    —————————————————————————

        4 77 FR 2136 (January 13, 2012).
    —————————————————————————

        Registration of Swap Dealers and Major Swap Participants 5 
    (“Swap Entity Registration Rule”)
    —————————————————————————

        5 77 FR 2613 (January 19, 2012).
    —————————————————————————

        Swap Dealer and Major Swap Participant Recordkeeping, Reporting, 
    and Duties Rules; Futures Commission Merchant and Introducing Broker 
    Conflict of Interest Rules; and Chief Compliance Officer Rules for Swap 
    Dealers, Major Swap Participants, and Futures Commission Merchants 6 
    (“Daily Trading Records,” “Risk Management,” and “Chief Compliance 
    Officer” Rules)
    —————————————————————————

        6 77 FR 20128 (April 3, 2012).
    —————————————————————————

        Further Definition of “Swap Dealer,” “Security-Based Swap 
    Dealer,” “Major Swap Participant,” “Major Security-Based Swap 
    Participant,” and “Eligible Contract Participant” 7 (“Entity 
    Definition Rule”)
    —————————————————————————

        7 77 FR 30596 (May 23, 2012).

    —————————————————————————

    [[Page 12556]]

        Swap Data Recordkeeping and Reporting Requirements: Pre-Enactment 
    and Transition Swaps 8 (“Historical SDR Reporting Rule”)
    —————————————————————————

        8 77 FR 35200 (June 12, 2012).
    —————————————————————————

        Confirmations, Portfolio Reconciliation, Portfolio Compression, and 
    Swap Trading Relationship Documentation Requirements for Swap Dealers 
    and Major Swap Participants 9 (“Portfolio Reconciliation Rule”)
    —————————————————————————

        9 77 FR 55904 (September 11, 2012).
    —————————————————————————

        Core Principles and Other Requirements for Swap Execution 
    Facilities 10 (“SEF Registration Rule”)
    —————————————————————————

        10 78 FR 33476 (June 4, 2013).
    —————————————————————————

        The court directed the Commission to address explicitly whether the 
    costs and benefits the Commission identified in those rulemakings apply 
    to activities outside the United States, and to address any differences 
    that may exist. In this release, the Commission takes two actions:
        First, the Commission supplements the preambles to the eight 
    remanded rulemakings by clarifying that, unless otherwise specified, 
    the costs and benefits identified therein addressed both domestic swaps 
    activities and overseas swaps activities subject to the Commission’s 
    jurisdiction by operation of CEA section 2(i).11 In considering those 
    costs and benefits, the Commission considered all evidence in the 
    record, regardless of whether the evidence pertained to activities in 
    the United States or overseas. The rule preambles, including the 
    Commission’s discussions of costs and benefits, reflect the 
    Commission’s understanding that the swaps market operates across 
    borders, that some regulated activity would occur overseas, and that 
    Congress expressly provided that the Commission’s swaps regulations 
    would apply to activities outside the United States to the extent of 
    CEA section 2(i). As with other variations in the universe of covered 
    swaps activities, where the record evidence contained no information 
    indicating a material difference in costs and benefits based on the 
    geographic locus of swaps activities, the Commission addressed its 
    consideration of costs and benefits of the rules to all swaps 
    activities to which the rules apply. In the small number of instances 
    where commenters raised issues specific to overseas activities or 
    provided data about those activities, the Commission addressed those 
    issues and data.12 Consistent with this approach, and subject to the 
    limitations of the information available in the rulemaking records, the 
    costs and benefits identified in the rule preambles applied to all 
    covered activity within the Commission’s jurisdiction.
    —————————————————————————

        11 7 U.S.C. 2(i).
        12 See infra n.52.
    —————————————————————————

        Second, the Commission is soliciting comments on whether there are 
    costs or benefits of the remanded rules as applied to business 
    activities outside the United States that differ from those of the 
    rules as applied to activities within the United States. Following its 
    review of the comments, the Commission will publish a further response 
    to the District Court remand order which would include any 
    supplementation of, or changes to, its consideration of the costs and 
    benefits of the rules as set forth in the rule preambles. The 
    Commission will also consider proposing changes to the rules based on 
    information developed in this process and other relevant 
    considerations.

    II. Background

    A. The District Court Litigation and Decision

        On December 4, 2013, three trade associations sued the Commission 
    in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, 
    challenging, on various grounds, the Commission’s Interpretive Guidance 
    and Policy Statement Regarding Compliance with Certain Swap Regulations 
    13 (“Cross-Border Guidance”) as well as the extraterritorial 
    application of fourteen of the rules promulgated by the Commission to 
    implement the provisions of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and 
    Consumer Protection Act 14 regarding swaps.15 The fourteen 
    challenged rules were promulgated by the Commission in twelve 
    rulemakings.16 On September 16, 2014, the court issued a decision, 
    granting summary judgment to the Commission on most issues.
    —————————————————————————

        13 78 FR 45292 (July 26, 2013).
        14 Public Law 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376.
        15 Op. at *1, *5. The plaintiffs were the Securities Industry 
    and Financial Markets Association, the International Swaps and 
    Derivatives Association, and the Institute of International Bankers. 
    Op. at *1.
        16 See Op. at *5. Three of the fourteen challenged rules, 
    informally identified by the court as the “Daily Trading Records,” 
    “Risk Management,” and “Chief Compliance Officer” Rules, were 
    promulgated as part of a single rulemaking. Id.

        The court summarized the case by observing,
        The majority of plaintiffs’ claims fail because Congress has 
    clearly indicated that the swaps provisions within Title VII of the 
    Dodd-Frank Act–including any rules or regulations prescribed by the 
    CFTC–apply extraterritorially whenever the jurisdictional nexus in 
    7 U.S.C. 2(i) is satisfied. In this regard, plaintiffs’ challenges 
    to the extraterritorial application of the Title VII Rules merely 
    seek to delay the inevitable.17
    —————————————————————————

        17 Op. at *42.

    Major holdings by the court regarding the cross-border application of 
    the Commission’s swaps rules included the following:
        1. The Commission’s Cross-Border Guidance is not subject to 
    judicial review because it is in part a non-binding general statement 
    of policy and in part an interpretive rule, neither of which is subject 
    to judicial review under the Administrative Procedure Act.18
    —————————————————————————

        18 Op. at *34.
    —————————————————————————

        2. Section 2(i) of the CEA is a self-effectuating provision that 
    makes Commission swaps rules apply to business activities outside the 
    United States to the extent they meet the test set forth in the 
    statutory language.19 No Commission rulemaking is needed to make 
    swaps rules extend to the geographic reach established by Congress in 
    this provision.20 Thus, the Commission’s substantive rules regarding 
    swaps do not need to specify their international scope since that was 
    done by statute.21
    —————————————————————————

        19 Op. at *34. Section 2(i), 7 U.S.C. 2(i), provides that the 
    provisions of this Act relating to swaps that were enacted by the 
    Wall Street Transparency and Accountability Act of 2010 (including 
    any rule prescribed or regulation promulgated under that Act), shall 
    not apply to activities outside the United States unless those 
    activities–(1) have a direct and significant connection with 
    activities in, or effect on, commerce of the United States; or (2) 
    contravene such rules or regulations as the Commission may prescribe 
    or promulgate as are necessary or appropriate to prevent the evasion 
    of any provision of this Act that was enacted by the Wall Street 
    Transparency and Accountability Act of 2010.
        Section 2(i)(2), regarding anti-evasion rules, was not at issue 
    in the SIFMA v. CFTC litigation.
        20 Op. at *33 (“As already noted, Section 2(i) provides the 
    authority–without implementing regulations, see infra Section 
    III.A–to enforce the Title VII Rules extraterritorially whenever 
    activities” meet the test set forth in the statute).
        21 Op. at *36-*37.
    —————————————————————————

        3. Because Congress determined that the Commission’s swaps rules 
    apply to certain overseas activities and established the test for 
    determining when the rules would apply to those activities, the 
    Commission was not tasked with reconsidering the costs and benefits of 
    those legislative decisions.22
    —————————————————————————

        22 Op. at *38.
    —————————————————————————

        4. Because section 2(i) establishes the extraterritorial scope of 
    the Commission’s swaps rules, the Commission can enforce those rules 
    overseas relying on that provision. However, to the extent that it may 
    be useful to develop a more refined interpretation of how section 2(i) 
    applies in particular circumstances, the Commission has discretion to 
    address

    [[Page 12557]]

    those interpretive issues via either rulemaking or case-by-case 
    adjudication.23 Whichever choice it makes, the Commission is not 
    required to define the precise scope of section 2(i) each time it 
    promulgates a substantive swaps rule; it can address issues of the 
    scope of section 2(i) as they arise.24
    —————————————————————————

        23 Op. at *35.
        24 Op. at *36-*37.
    —————————————————————————

        Based on these principles, the court held that the rules challenged 
    by the plaintiffs apply to swaps activities outside the United States 
    to the extent specified by section 2(i).25 The court also held that, 
    even though some commenters asked the Commission to address the 
    geographical scope of the rules, the Commission reasonably determined 
    not to address issues of geographical scope in these particular 
    proceedings and to simply rely on the statute (i.e., section 2(i)) to 
    define the rules’ application to activities outside the United 
    States.26
    —————————————————————————

        25 Op. at *35.
        26 Op. at *36.
    —————————————————————————

        On the other hand, the court further held that, in the preambles 
    for ten of the challenged rules, promulgated as part of eight 
    rulemakings,27 the Commission should have, but did not, state whether 
    the costs and benefits identified in the rule preambles applied not 
    only to domestic swaps activities, but also to swaps activities outside 
    the United States.28 The eight remanded rulemakings are listed above. 
    Specifically, the court held that the Commission should have discussed 
    whether and to what extent the costs and benefits as to overseas 
    activity may differ from those related to domestic application of the 
    rules.29 On that basis, the court described the rules as 
    “inadequately explained.” 30 It stated, however, that it was 
    “willing to assume for now” that the issue was “one of form and not 
    of substance.” 31 It also held that this perceived shortcoming was 
    “not so serious as to favor vacatur” of the rules.32 The court 
    further reasoned that vacatur of these rules would “produce a bevy of 
    disruptive consequences,” in part because “after vacatur, U.S.-based 
    swap dealers would be able to avoid Title VII regulations by engaging 
    in transactions through their foreign subsidiaries and affiliates, even 
    if the transactions’ risk remained with the U.S.-based corporation.” 
    33 Based on its analysis of the statute and rules, the court 
    determined that there “exists at least a serious possibility” that 
    the affected rules would remain unchanged as a result of proceedings on 
    remand to elaborate on the geographic element of the identified costs 
    and benefits.34 The court therefore remanded without vacatur the 
    eight rulemakings encompassing the rules in question for the Commission 
    to better explain its position on whether the costs and benefits 
    identified in the rule preambles applied to overseas activities, and to 
    explain any relevant differences.35
    —————————————————————————

        27 As noted above, three of the rules at issue were 
    promulgated as part of a single rulemaking.
        28 Although the Commission believes that it was sufficiently 
    clear that the discussion of costs and benefits in the rule 
    preambles applied to all swaps activity within the Commission’s 
    jurisdiction unless otherwise specified, the Commission has declined 
    to appeal the district court’s ruling. Thus, the court’s remand 
    order is final and binding on the Commission.
        29 Op. at *39-*40.
        30 Op. at *40, *42.
        31 Op. at *41 (internal quotation and citation omitted).
        32 Id.
        33 Id.
        34 Id.
        35 Op. at *41, *42-43. The plaintiffs’ challenge to the 
    “Trade Execution Rule,” Process for a Designated Contract Market 
    or Swap Execution Facility to Make a Swap Available to Trade, Swap 
    Transaction Compliance and Implementation Schedule, and Trade 
    Execution Requirement Under the Commodity Exchange Act, 78 FR 33606 
    (June 4, 2013), was dismissed for lack of standing. Op. at *23. For 
    three other rules–the “Large Trader Reporting Rule,” Large Trader 
    Reporting for Physical Commodity Swaps, 76 FR 43851 (July 22, 2011); 
    the “Straight-Through Processing Rule,” Customer Clearing 
    Documentation, Timing of Acceptance for Clearing, and Clearing 
    Member Risk Management, 77 FR 21278 (April 9, 2012); and the 
    “Clearing Determination Rule,” Clearing Requirement Determination 
    Under Section 2(h) of the CEA, 77 FR 74284 (December 13, 2012)–the 
    court granted summary judgment to the Commission without reaching 
    the merits because the plaintiffs did not identify comments 
    submitted to the Commission during the rulemaking proceedings that 
    raised issues regarding the extraterritorial applications of these 
    rules or the associated costs and benefits. Op. at *36 n.30.
    —————————————————————————

    B. The District Court’s Rulings on Consideration of Costs and Benefits

        The district court remanded the eight rulemakings “for further 
    proceedings consistent with the Opinion issued this same day.” 36 
    The court’s opinion included a number of holdings and observations that 
    provide guidance as to the actions the Commission must take on remand 
    with respect to the consideration of the costs and benefits of the 
    extraterritorial application of the rules in question.
    —————————————————————————

        36 Op. at *43.
    —————————————————————————

        1. The court held that, because Congress made the determination 
    that the swaps rules apply overseas to the extent specified in section 
    2(i), CEA section 15(a) does not require the Commission to consider 
    whether it is necessary or desirable for particular rules to apply to 
    overseas activities as specified in section 2(i).37 Indeed, the court 
    explained, the Commission cannot, based on a consideration of costs and 
    benefits, second-guess Congress’s decision that swaps rules apply to 
    certain overseas activities.38 As a result, the court stated that 
    “the only issues necessarily before the CFTC on remand would be the 
    substance of the Title VII rules, not the scope of those Rules’ 
    extraterritorial applications under 7 U.S.C. 2(i).” 39
    —————————————————————————

        37 Op. at *38.
        38 Op. at *39; see also id. at *41 n.35.
        39 Op. at *41.
    —————————————————————————

        2. At the same time, the court held that, in considering costs and 
    benefits of the substantive regulatory choices it makes when 
    promulgating a swaps rule, the Commission is required to take into 
    consideration the fact that the rule, by statute, will apply to certain 
    overseas activity.40 Thus, the Commission’s consideration of costs 
    and benefits of the application of the rule must encompass both foreign 
    and domestic business activities.41 The court held that the 
    Commission failed to meet this requirement because, the court stated, 
    in the cost-benefit discussions for the rules at issue the Commission 
    did not give explicit consideration to costs and benefits specific to 
    overseas activities.42
    —————————————————————————

        40 Op. at *39.
        41 Id.
        42 Id.
    —————————————————————————

        3. The court held that the Commission has discretion either to 
    consider costs and benefits of the international application of swaps 
    rules separately from domestic application or to evaluate them 
    together, “so long as the cost-benefit analysis makes clear that the 
    CFTC reasonably considered both.” 43 The district court found that, 
    at the time the rules at issue in the litigation were promulgated, 
    foreign swaps regulations were still under development so that costs of 
    possible duplicative regulation were hypothetical and did not have to 
    be considered.44 The court noted that this fact raised the 
    possibility that the costs and benefits of the rules’ extraterritorial 
    application “were essentially identical to those of the Rules’ 
    domestic applications” so that the Commission “functionally 
    considered the extraterritorial costs and benefits” of the rules “by 
    considering the Rules’ domestic costs and benefits.” 45 However, the 
    court concluded that it did not need to address that possibility 
    because the cost-benefit discussions in the rule preambles gave “no 
    indication” that this

    [[Page 12558]]

    was so.46 The court further noted that foreign swaps regulations 
    passed since the promulgation of the rules at issue in the litigation 
    “may now raise issues of duplicative regulatory burdens” but that 
    “the CFTC may well conclude that its policy of substituted compliance 
    largely negates these costs.” 47
    —————————————————————————

        43 Op. at *40.
        44 Op. at *39.
        45 Op. at *40.
        46 Id.
        47 Op. at *41.
    —————————————————————————

        4. Finally, the court noted that “[p]laintiffs raise no complaints 
    regarding the CFTC’s evaluation of the general, often unquantifiable, 
    benefits and costs of the domestic application of the Title VII 
    Rules.” 48 As a result, the court held, “[o]n remand, the CFTC 
    would only need to make explicit which of those benefits and costs 
    similarly apply to the Rules’ extraterritorial applications.” 49
    —————————————————————————

        48 Op. at *41.
        49 Id.
    —————————————————————————

    III. Supplement to Preambles of Remanded Rulemakings Regarding the 
    Scope of the Commission’s Consideration of Costs and Benefits

        The Commission hereby clarifies that it considered costs and 
    benefits based on the understanding that the swaps market functions 
    internationally, with many transactions involving U.S. firms taking 
    place across international boundaries; with leading industry members 
    typically conducting operations both within and outside the United 
    States; and with industry members commonly following substantially 
    similar business practices wherever located. The Commission considered 
    all evidence in the record, and in the absence of evidence indicating 
    differences in costs and benefits between foreign and domestic swaps 
    activities, the Commission did not find occasion to characterize 
    explicitly the identified costs and benefits as foreign or domestic. 
    Thus, where the Commission did not specifically refer to matters of 
    location, its discussion of costs and benefits referred to the effects 
    of its rules on all business activity subject to its regulations, 
    whether by virtue of the activity’s physical location in the United 
    States or by virtue of the activity’s connection with or effect on U.S. 
    commerce under section 2(i).50 In the language of the district court, 
    the Commission “functionally considered the extraterritorial costs and 
    benefits,” 51 and this was because the evidence in the record did 
    not suggest that differences existed, with certain limited exceptions 
    that the Commission addressed.52 For example, as the district court 
    found, at the time of the promulgation of the rules at issue, foreign 
    swaps regulations generally were still being developed so any costs 
    associated with potentially duplicative or inconsistent regulations 
    remained hypothetical.53 Thus, as the court noted, the plaintiffs in 
    SIFMA v. CFTC did not “identify any specific data that the CFTC failed 
    to take into account.” 54
    —————————————————————————

        50 The statement in the text reflects the Commission’s 
    approach in its consideration of costs and benefits for all of its 
    Dodd-Frank rules, unless otherwise specified for a particular issue 
    or issues in a particular rulemaking.
        51 Op. at *40.
        52 See, e.g., Portfolio Reconciliation Rule, 77 FR at 55945-
    46, 55948-49 & nn.79, 84, 98, 108 (considering ISDA data regarding 
    U.S. and foreign firms, and factoring in European proposals); Risk 
    Management Rule, 77 FR at 20177 n.104 (relying on UK FSA study); 
    Swaps Entity Registration Rule, 77 FR at 2624-25 (stating in 
    response to comments that Commission “does not believe that 
    foreign-based Swaps Entities will bear higher costs associated with 
    the registration process” and giving explanation); SDR Reporting 
    Rule, 77 FR at 2192 (considering costs and benefits of swap 
    identifiers, including in cross-border activities).
        53 Op. at *39.
        54 Op. at *39.
    —————————————————————————

    IV. Request for Comments

        As noted above, the district court stated that, on remand, the 
    Commission “would only need to make explicit” which of the costs and 
    benefits identified in the rule preambles “similarly apply to the 
    Rules’ extraterritorial applications.” 55 In order to assist the 
    Commission in determining whether any further consideration or 
    explanation–beyond that contained in the original rule preambles and 
    this release–is needed to respond to this mandate, the Commission 
    requests comments on the following questions:
    —————————————————————————

        55 Op. at *41.
    —————————————————————————

        1. Are there any benefits or costs that the Commission identified 
    in any of the rule preambles that do not apply, or apply to a different 
    extent, to the relevant rule’s extraterritorial applications?
        2. Are there any costs or benefits that are unique to one or more 
    of the rules’ extraterritorial applications? If so, please specify how.
        3. Put another way, are the types of costs and benefits that arise 
    from the extraterritorial application of any of the rules different 
    from those that arise from the domestic application? If so, how and to 
    what extent?
        4. If significant differences exist in the costs and benefits of 
    the extraterritorial and domestic application of one or more of the 
    rules, what are the implications of those differences for the 
    substantive requirements of the rule or rules?
        Comments should specify, in the header of the comment, the 
    particular rule or rules that they address. The Commission requests 
    that comments focus on information and analysis specifically relevant 
    to the inquiry specified by the district court’s remand order. 
    Consistent with the district court’s holding that the Commission is not 
    required to address the issue of what the geographical scope of its 
    rules should be in the challenged rulemakings,56 the purpose of this 
    request for comments is to further consider the cross-border costs and 
    benefits of the substance of the rules, not to initiate a process to 
    address the rules’ cross-border scope, which, as the district court 
    held, is prescribed by section 2(i).57 The Commission further 
    requests that commenters supply the Commission with relevant data to 
    support their comments.
    —————————————————————————

        56 Op. at *36-*37.
        57 However, as it has done in the past, the Commission will 
    continue to consider the proper interpretation and application of 
    section 2(i) in particular circumstances.

        Issued in Washington, DC, on March 4, 2015, by the Commission.
    Christopher J. Kirkpatrick,
    Secretary of the Commission.

        Note: The following appendix will not appear in the Code of 
    Federal Regulations.

    Appendix to Initial Response to District Court Remand Order in 
    Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association, et al. v. United 
    States Commodity Futures Trading Commission–Commission Voting Summary

        On this matter, Chairman Massad and Commissioners Wetjen, Bowen, 
    and Giancarlo voted in the affirmative. No Commissioner voted in the 
    negative.

    [FR Doc. 2015-05413 Filed 3-9-15; 8:45 am]
     BILLING CODE 6351-01-P

     

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