Posts Tagged ‘CFTC’

CFTC Begins Publishing New Large-Trader Report for Financial Futures Markets

Tuesday, July 27th, 2010

Washington, DC – The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) today announced that it will begin publishing a new report that adds further transparency to the financial futures markets. The report, entitled Traders in Financial Futures (TFF), builds on improvements to transparency implemented last year that disaggregated data in the CFTC’s weekly Commitments of Traders (COT) Reports.

“Promoting transparency is at the core of the CFTC’s mission,” CFTC Chairman Gary Gensler said. “The new Traders in Financial Futures reports will provide the public with a better view into the financial futures marketplace. This transparency effort builds upon prior improvements we made to the COT reports and will provide the market with much helpful information. I thank the CFTC staff for their hard work to prepare these new reports.”

For decades, the CFTC has provided the futures industry with COT reports consisting of aggregated large-trader position data to shed light on the changing composition of the markets. The reports are based on a request by Congress for an annual report, upon passage of original enabling legislation in the 1920’s, and have been intensified over time into weekly reports in several formats.

The new TFF report uses the same data that appears in the COT reports, but separates large traders in the financial futures markets into the following four categories: Dealer/Intermediary; Asset Manager/Institutional; Leveraged Funds; and Other Reportables. The “dealer/intermediary” category comprises the sell-side participants that earn commissions selling financial products, capturing bid/offer spreads and otherwise accommodating clients. The remaining three categories represent buy-side participants. These are generally clients of the sell-side participants who use the markets to invest, hedge, manage risk, speculate or change the term structure or duration of their assets.

Like the COT reports, the TFF report provides a breakdown of each Tuesday’s open interest for markets in which 20 or more traders hold positions equal to or above the reporting levels established by the CFTC. The report is published in futures-only and futures-and-options-combined formats. The TFF report will be published concurrently with the legacy COT. The TFF report, however, is not a disaggregation of the COT data for the financial markets. The traders classified into one of the four categories in the TFF report may be drawn from either the “commercial” or “noncommercial” categories of traders in the legacy COT reports. The CFTC also plans to soon release four years of historical data for the new report.

CFTC Votes to Propose Oil-Trading Curbs

Thursday, January 14th, 2010

I’m not sure how implementing trading curbs will prevent the volatile swings and run-ups. If you ask me, let the market stay free.

By KARA SCANNELL

The Commodity Futures Trading Commission took a first step toward imposing limits on positions energy traders can hold, but three commissioners expressed reservations that could make it harder for the rule to be made final.

CFTC Chairman Gary Gensler has made position limits a top priority, and the proposal is the first major initiative under his leadership. Commissioners voted 4-1 to issue the proposed rule for 90 days of public comment.

The measure responds to criticism from many lawmakers in Congress blaming financial traders for the run-up in energy prices in the summer of 2008—and blaming the CFTC for failing to do something about it. The proposal is designed to tamp down volatility and keep prices in line with real demand.

Some commissioners questioned that notion at Thursday’s meeting. Republican Commissioner Scott O’Malia, who is new to the agency, asked why the CFTC would move to impose limits on energy traders when existing limits on agricultural commodities didn’t prevent swings in prices in recent years. Click here to continue…