The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission advanced a proposed rulemaking on position limits in a 3-2 vote on Jan. 30.
The proposal, which will be open for public comment for 90 days, addresses an issue that the CFTC has been grappling with since the Dodd-Frank Act updated the statutory provisions related to speculative limits in 2010. As proposed, the rulemaking would expand the range of commodity derivatives subject to federal position limits. However, the rulemaking also seeks to avoid interfering with the ability of end-users that use derivatives to hedge their market risks.
Details of the position limits proposal are as follows:
CFTC Chairman Heath Tarbert called the proposal the "closing chapter in the long saga of position limits." He underscored that position limits apply only to speculative activity and that "Congress has always intended that positions that are a bona fide hedge of price risk should not be subject to limits," which means "the exception is as important as the rule itself."
Commissioner Brian Quintenz supported the proposal, noting that it offers "new flexibility combined with new regulation," and that it "appropriately focuses on the time period and contract type where position limits can have the most positive, and the least negative, impact—the spot month of physically settled contracts." Commissioner Dawn Stump also supported the proposal, commenting that action is overdue on this issue and that "we cannot let the perfect be the enemy of the good."
Commissioners Rostin Behnam and Dan Berkovitz both voted against the proposal, largely expressing concerns over the CFTC ceding oversight authority to exchanges and the statutory basis for doing so.
"While the proposal purports to respect the Congressional intent" of position limits set out under Dodd-Frank, Behnam said "it pushes the bounds of reasonable interpretation by deferring to the exchanges." He also expressed concern that by ceding oversight the Commission would struggle to maintain leadership or reclaim authority in this area.
Berkovitz echoed those concerns and warned the rulemaking "demotes the Commission from its traditional role of head coach to Monday morning quarterback, second-guessing the exchanges." He also spoke at length about the possibility of alternate methods of creating a position limits rulemaking without the reliance on strict necessity findings.
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