11/02/2010 04:48:00 PM EST
SEC and CFTC Adopt Rules for Reporting of Swaps
The Securities and Exchange Commission and Commodity
Futures Trading Commission recently adopted interim final rules for the
reporting of swaps that were entered into prior to the enactment of the
Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act and had not expired
as of July 21, 2010 ("pre-enactment swaps"). The adoption of these rules was
mandated by the Dodd-Frank Act, which required the SEC and CFTC to adopt rules
for the reporting of pre-enactment swaps within 90 days of the enactment of the
Dodd-Frank Act.
Reporting Obligations
The requirements of the SEC and CFTC rules are
substantially similar. They require specified counterparties to pre-enactment
swaps to provide to a registered swap data repository or the relevant
Commission:
- a
copy of the transaction confirmation, in electronic form, if available, or
in written form, if there is no electronic copy; and
- the
time, if available, the transaction was executed.
In addition, a counterparty to a pre-enactment swap is
required to report to the relevant Commission upon request any information
relating to such swap during the time that the interim final temporary rule is
in effect. Such information may include actual trade data as well as summary
trade data. Summary data may include a description of the types of a swap
dealer's counterparties or types of reference entities, or the total number of
pre-enactment swaps entered into by the dealer and some measure of the
frequency and duration of those contracts.
Reporting Party
The new rules require the following parties to report
swaps:
- with
respect to a swap in which only one counterparty is a swap dealer or major
swap participant, the swap dealer or major swap participant must report
the swap;
- with
respect to a swap in which one counterparty is a swap dealer and the other
counterparty is a major swap participant, the swap dealer must report the
swap;
- with
respect to any other swap, the parties to the swap must select a reporting
party.
Record Retention
Each counterparty to a pre-enactment swap that may be
required to report such swap must retain information and documents relating to
the terms of the transaction. Specifically, such counterparties must retain all
information and documents, if available, to the extent and in such form as they
currently exist, relating to the terms of the swap, including but not limited
to:
- any
information necessary to identify and value the transaction;
- the
date and time of execution of the transaction;
- all
information from which the price of the transaction was derived;
- whether
the transaction was accepted for clearing by any clearing agency or
derivatives clearing organization, and, if so, the identity of such
clearing agency or derivatives clearing organization;
- any
modification(s) to the terms of the transaction; and
- the
final confirmation of the transaction.
Effective Date
The record retention requirements are effective
immediately. Reporting obligations will become effective on the earlier of (i)
the compliance dates established by the SEC and CFTC in future rulemaking or
(ii) 60 days after a registered swap data repository commences operations.
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