[House Hearing, 112 Congress] [From the U.S. Government Publishing Office] ASSESSING THE REGULATORY, ECONOMIC, AND MARKET IMPLICATIONS OF THE DODD-FRANK DERIVATIVES TITLE ======================================================================= HEARING BEFORE THE COMMITTEE ON FINANCIAL SERVICES U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES ONE HUNDRED TWELFTH CONGRESS FIRST SESSION ---------- FEBRUARY 15, 2011 ---------- Printed for the use of the Committee on Financial Services Serial No. 112-5 ASSESSING THE REGULATORY, ECONOMIC, AND MARKET IMPLICATIONS OF THE DODD-FRANK DERIVATIVES TITLE ASSESSING THE REGULATORY, ECONOMIC, AND MARKET IMPLICATIONS OF THE DODD-FRANK DERIVATIVES TITLE ======================================================================= HEARING BEFORE THE COMMITTEE ON FINANCIAL SERVICES U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES ONE HUNDRED TWELFTH CONGRESS FIRST SESSION __________ FEBRUARY 15, 2011 __________ Printed for the use of the Committee on Financial Services Serial No. 112-5 U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 64-554 WASHINGTON : 2011 ----------------------------------------------------------------------- For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office, http://bookstore.gpo.gov. For more information, contact the GPO Customer Contact Center, U.S. Government Printing Office. Phone 202�09512�091800, or 866�09512�091800 (toll-free). E-mail, [email protected]. HOUSE COMMITTEE ON FINANCIAL SERVICES SPENCER BACHUS, Alabama, Chairman JEB HENSARLING, Texas, Vice BARNEY FRANK, Massachusetts, Chairman Ranking Member PETER T. KING, New York MAXINE WATERS, California EDWARD R. ROYCE, California CAROLYN B. MALONEY, New York FRANK D. LUCAS, Oklahoma LUIS V. GUTIERREZ, Illinois RON PAUL, Texas NYDIA M. VELAZQUEZ, New York DONALD A. MANZULLO, Illinois MELVIN L. WATT, North Carolina WALTER B. JONES, North Carolina GARY L. ACKERMAN, New York JUDY BIGGERT, Illinois BRAD SHERMAN, California GARY G. MILLER, California GREGORY W. MEEKS, New York SHELLEY MOORE CAPITO, West Virginia MICHAEL E. CAPUANO, Massachusetts SCOTT GARRETT, New Jersey RUBEN HINOJOSA, Texas RANDY NEUGEBAUER, Texas WM. LACY CLAY, Missouri PATRICK T. McHENRY, North Carolina CAROLYN McCARTHY, New York JOHN CAMPBELL, California JOE BACA, California MICHELE BACHMANN, Minnesota STEPHEN F. LYNCH, Massachusetts KENNY MARCHANT, Texas BRAD MILLER, North Carolina THADDEUS G. McCOTTER, Michigan DAVID SCOTT, Georgia KEVIN McCARTHY, California AL GREEN, Texas STEVAN PEARCE, New Mexico EMANUEL CLEAVER, Missouri BILL POSEY, Florida GWEN MOORE, Wisconsin MICHAEL G. FITZPATRICK, KEITH ELLISON, Minnesota Pennsylvania ED PERLMUTTER, Colorado LYNN A. WESTMORELAND, Georgia JOE DONNELLY, Indiana BLAINE LUETKEMEYER, Missouri ANDRE CARSON, Indiana BILL HUIZENGA, Michigan JAMES A. HIMES, Connecticut SEAN P. DUFFY, Wisconsin GARY C. PETERS, Michigan NAN A. S. HAYWORTH, New York JOHN C. CARNEY, Jr., Delaware JAMES B. RENACCI, Ohio ROBERT HURT, Virginia ROBERT J. DOLD, Illinois DAVID SCHWEIKERT, Arizona MICHAEL G. GRIMM, New York FRANCISCO ``QUICO'' CANSECO, Texas STEVE STIVERS, Ohio Larry C. Lavender, Chief of Staff C O N T E N T S ---------- Page Hearing held on: February 15, 2011............................................ 1 Appendix: February 15, 2011............................................ 73 WITNESSES Tuesday, February 15, 2011 Cawley, James, Chief Executive Officer, Javelin Capital Markets, on behalf of the Swaps and Derivatives Market Association (SDMA)......................................................... 58 Donahue, Donald F., Chairman and Chief Executive officer, The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC)................. 53 Duffy, Terrence A., Executive Chairman, CME Group Inc............ 55 Gensler, Hon. Gary, Chairman, U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC).............................................. 10 Giancarlo, J. Christopher, Executive Vice President, GFI Group Inc............................................................ 60 Reiners, Craig, Director of Risk Management, MillerCoors LLC, on behalf of the Coalition for Derivatives End-Users.............. 51 Schapiro, Hon. Mary L., Chairman, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)............................................... 8 Tarullo, Hon. Daniel K., Governor, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System......................................... 11 Thompson, Don, Managing Director and Associate General Counsel, JPMorgan Chase & Co., on behalf of the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association (SIFMA).......................... 57 APPENDIX Prepared statements: Bachus, Hon. Spencer......................................... 74 Hinojosa, Hon. Ruben......................................... 75 Cawley, James................................................ 77 Donahue, Donald F............................................ 81 Duffy, Terrence A.,.......................................... 257 Gensler, Hon. Gary........................................... 277 Giancarlo, J. Christopher.................................... 288 Reiners, Craig............................................... 309 Schapiro, Hon. Mary L........................................ 312 Tarullo, Hon. Daniel K....................................... 323 Thompson, Don................................................ 330 Additional Material Submitted for the Record Garrett, Hon. Scott: Written responses to questions submitted to Hon. Gary Gensler 337 Editorial from The Wall Street Journal dated February 11, 2011, entitled, ``The Futures of America''................. 348 Hinojosa, Hon. Ruben: Written responses to questions submitted to Donald F. Donahue 350 Letter from The Financial Services Roundtable to David A. Stawick, Secretary of the Commission, CFTC................. 353 Written responses to questions submitted to James Cawley..... 357 Written responses to questions submitted to Terrence A. Duffy 361 Written responses to questions submitted to Hon. Gary Gensler 364 Written responses to questions submitted to J. Christopher Giancarlo.................................................. 366 Written responses to questions submitted to Hon. Daniel Tarullo.................................................... 369 Perlmutter, Hon. Ed: Written response to a question submitted to Craig Reiners.... 370 Waters, Hon. Maxine: Editorial from The New York Times dated February 14, 2011, entitled, ``Vanishing Act: `Advisers' Distance Themselves From a Report''............................................ 371 ASSESSING THE REGULATORY, ECONOMIC, AND MARKET IMPLICATIONS OF THE DODD-FRANK DERIVATIVES TITLE ---------- Tuesday, February 15, 2011 U.S. House of Representatives, Committee on Financial Services, Washington, D.C. The committee met, pursuant to notice, at 10:03 a.m., in room 2128, Rayburn House Office Building, Hon. Spencer Bachus [chairman of the committee] presiding. Members present: Representatives Bachus, Hensarling, Royce, Lucas, Manzullo, Biggert, Capito, Garrett, Neugebauer, McHenry, Marchant, Pearce, Posey, Fitzpatrick, Luetkemeyer, Huizenga, Duffy, Hayworth, Renacci, Hurt, Dold, Schweikert, Grimm, Canseco, Stivers; Frank, Waters, Maloney, Velazquez, Watt, Ackerman, Sherman, Meeks, Capuano, Hinojosa, Clay, Baca, Lynch, Miller of North Carolina, Scott, Green, Ellison, Perlmutter, Carson, Himes, Peters, and Carney. Chairman Bachus. In the interest of time, I am going to submit my written statement for the record and will not make an opening statement. And I will recognize some members on our side until our 10 minutes has expired. I urge members to give a brief statement or submit a written statement so we can move along. We will adhere to the 10 minute-limit on each side. Without objection, all members' written statements will be made a part of the record. I want to welcome our witnesses and I look forward to your testimony. And with that, I recognize the ranking member for his opening statement. Mr. Frank. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and I will ask to be recognized for 3 minutes. We will stay within the 10 minutes. The hearing today is a prelude to a very important set of decisions we are going to be making today on the Floor. We have two very able and dedicated regulators who were extremely cooperative with us as we drafted the bill. We actually have three, but Mr. Tarullo is not on the Floor this week with his appropriation since his agency doesn't receive one. The budget that we have been presented for the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) prevent them from doing the job the American people need them to do. The CFTC is a very small agency compared to the massive industry we have asked them to regulate. I believe it is clear. We will hear more about this from the people on the Financial Inquiry Commission that the lack of regulation of derivatives in various aspects contributed greatly to the financial crisis. We gave the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and the SEC instructions with some latitude as to how to deal with that. We are, at this point, in jeopardy of their not being able to carry out that mandate. The SEC has other responsibilities in investor protection and elsewhere that are in jeopardy. So I hope we will, as we go through this hearing, and talk about the importance of this to be done thoughtfully and in coordination between the SEC and the CFTC, keep in mind that an absence of funding will make all of this invalid. Agencies that are not well-funded are not going to do a good job. I would say to people in the industry, the laws and the rules, the law has already been adopted, the rules are about to be promulgated, it is not in anybody's interest to have agencies that are not well-funded, not able to have the equipment they need, not able to have the personnel they need to carry these out. And that, I think, is the overhanging question as we go through this hearing. We are about to debate a budget from my Republican colleagues that will provide such inadequate funding for the SEC and the CFTC as to make all of this academic. I will be offering an amendment to increase funding for the SEC. The CFTC does not come under the jurisdiction of this committee so I have no amendment to offer there. I believe the Administration has made some neutral proposals about how to increase its funding, and I hope that those are also adopted. But we will be voting on an amendment to raise the SEC--not to the level I wish it could be at, but to a far closer level to what is needed. And as we go forward and we talk about the importance of doing this, and I would say even to those who are critical, who wish we hadn't done some of what we did, unfunding the rules that remain in place is the worst of all approaches. Chairman Bachus. I thank the ranking member. Mr. Royce is recognized for 1 minute. Mr. Royce. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. One of the lessons of the recent sale of the New York Stock Exchange, a great symbol of America's financial strength, to a German exchange is that our markets are now competing against mature financial hubs throughout Europe and Asia. And much of this competition is because of the unfriendly business environment we have managed to create here in the United States. We have the second highest corporate tax rate in the developed world. We have the most active trial bar in the world. And we have a regulatory structure that burdens business without yielding many benefits. In the derivatives realm, if transaction costs to end users of derivatives increase because of duplicative rules, because of complex, unworkable prescriptions, because of damage liquidity, then end users simply will send their business to European dealers, whether it is Barclays or Deutsche Bank, with whom many already have trading relationships. Failure to create a commonsense regulatory structure that recognizes this fact will do little to protect investors, but will go a long way to benefit these growing financial hubs around the world. While Title VII wasn't what I would have liked to have seen, the benefit was that it gave the regulators, the supposed grownups in the room, the final say. Unfortunately, all signs thus far indicate that this, too, was a mistake. I look forward to hearing from the panel. And I yield back. Chairman Bachus. Mr. Lucas? Mr. Lucas. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, for holding today's hearing. In the last Congress, I worked with my colleagues on this committee, as well as the Agriculture Committee, to bring meaningful and responsible reform to derivatives regulation. Although I was not supportive of the final legislation, it is now critical that we work together to ensure that the implementation of Title VII is done right. These new regulations will undoubtedly have a tremendous impact on our country's financial sector and overall economy. As we work our way through the rulemaking process, it is important that the process be accomplished in a thoughtful and transparent manner, and that the necessary regulatory certainty be provided for all market participants. I remain concerned that the current timeline for implementation is unrealistic and that more time is needed to adequately implement the law. Additionally, we must ensure that the new rules are consistent with the congressional intent of Dodd-Frank. I look forward to continuing this discussion and hearing from our witnesses, and I yield back the balance of my time, Mr. Chairman. Chairman Bachus. Mr. Scott, for 2 minutes. Mr. Scott. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. As we have seen from the recent financial crisis, derivatives bring with them a number of certain potential dangers if not properly backed with capital, or if the market lacks sufficient transparency. But despite these past troubles, derivatives do serve a very valuable purpose for American businesses by protecting them against legitimate risk. The Dodd-Frank legislation passed in large part by our committee aims to regulate credit default swaps and other derivatives. Title VII of the law requires central clearing and exchange trading for derivatives that can, and I emphasize can, be cleared and provides the role of both regulators and clearinghouses in determining which contracts should be cleared. In addition, the law adds financial safeguards by ensuring that dealers and major swap participants have adequate financial resources to meet their responsibilities. And regulators now have the authority to impose capital and market requirements to swap dealers and major participants. These regulations on derivatives were passed as part of Dodd-Frank to increase accountability and transparency and to encourage stability in financial markets following the 2008 crisis. However, the effectiveness of this law depends heavily on how such rules are implemented by the regulators. I look forward to hearing opinions from today's witnesses on how the requirements enacted in Dodd-Frank are being adhered to now, how the regulatory process is proceeding, and how those regulations are contributing to increased financial stability, which is the end result we all seek. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Chairman Bachus. Thank you. Mr. Garrett is recognized for 2 minutes. Mr. Garrett. I thank the Chair. I thank the entire panel. Over the last several months, there has been a tremendous volume of discussion on all the rulemaking coming out of Dodd- Frank and the profound effects that it is going to have on the derivatives markets and the broader economy as well. But when you look at this freight train of rulemaking that is really running down the track to a July deadline, I think not enough alarm has been raised over the potentially devastating impact that this rulemaking may have on the U.S.- based derivatives marketplace. And when I talked to several market participants, they told me that if the rulemaking, particularly of the CFTC, were to be implemented in its current form it could literally spell the end of the U.S.-based derivatives market. It would simply cease to exist. That is because the potential negative consequences are many and far-reaching, from making it prohibitively expensive for thousands of your small, Main Street companies to engage in responsible risk mitigation, to making it basically impossible for many of our financial firms to compete around the world. So the real world impact, of course, will be felt in the loss of jobs, lots of jobs. Millions of manufacturing jobs have been lost, jobs over the last several years, but we have still remained a leader in financial services. But if these rules get implemented as is, that will no longer be the case. We will hemorrhage millions of excellent, high-paying jobs to other localities around the world where there will be little to no appetite, I think, to follow some of the more outlandish rulemakings that are part of a grand and I would say unnecessary expense that could have massive negative consequences. It is bad enough, I think, that Title VII was written literally in the middle of the last night of the Dodd-Frank conference back in June. So let us not here now exacerbate the mistakes made that night by rushing through a rulemaking process that is even more far-reaching than that contemplated by the bill's authors. Derivatives, I think, have been a favorite whipping boy, if you will, of many critics. But if we continue down this road, and there is not a lot of time to change course, there is-- literally may not be a U.S.-based derivatives market to kick around in this country anymore. I yield back. Chairman Bachus. Mr. Lynch for 3 minutes. Mr. Lynch. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I thank the ranking member. I would also like to thank the witnesses for coming to this committee today to help us with our work. The derivatives title of the Dodd-Frank Act is essential to reforming our financial system. I believe the derivatives market, its opacity and extreme leverage, caused a great deal of the difficulty and pain of the financial crisis. The interconnectedness of derivatives products and their use magnified among anonymous counterparties that concentrated risk, and much of it outside of the reach of our regulatory framework. We have asked the SEC and the CFTC to issue numerous rulemakings and hold public hearings and begin the process of regulating the over-the-counter derivatives market, which neither agency has held jurisdiction over in the past. I am concerned, however, that despite the increased responsibilities through Dodd-Frank, the SEC and the CFTC have received flat funding due to the extension of the continuing resolution. The ability of these agencies to police the markets and enforce securities and commodities laws is severely limited under current funding levels. What is particularly concerning is that by holding these agencies to Fiscal Year 2010 budget levels, neither has been able to hire staff with expertise in the OTC derivatives markets, which differ significantly from their prior responsibilities in securities and futures markets. And to make matters worse, the Republican proposal for a full year C.R. would cut $178 million from the SEC and $174 million from the CFTC. And that would force both of these agencies with new responsibilities to lay off staff. We need to ensure that these regulators have the tools and resources to complete the objectives that Congress has laid out. Don't worry about the markets running away to Europe. They are trying to strengthen their markets just the way we are trying to. This is a red herring. And if you think regulation is costly, how about the $7 trillion that we just lost from not regulating the derivatives market? That has not been taken into consideration. I look forward to the testimony. I thank you, Mr. Chairman. And I yield back. Chairman Bachus. Mr. McHenry, for 1 minute. Mr. McHenry. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, for yielding time. Over the past few decades, the derivatives market has developed into a highly sophisticated and yet essential market for U.S. businesses of all sizes. Therefore, it is vital that the regulators who have been empowered under Dodd-Frank continue to allow American businesses to manage their risk and protect themselves against market volatility. This is about jobs. A recent survey suggests that higher capital requirements could potentially cost end users on Main Street billions of dollars each year and put up to 130,000 jobs at risk. That is something we simply cannot afford to do while our economy is attempting to regain its strong footing. I would encourage the regulators to keep this in mind. And certainly our oversight hearings here in Congress will keep that in mind. And I yield back. Chairman Bachus. Mr. Luetkemeyer? Mr. Luetkemeyer. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I will yield back my time. Thank you. Chairman Bachus. Ms. Hayworth, for 1 minute. Dr. Hayworth. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Senior colleagues here have rightly noted that the United States has become an increasingly hostile environment for investment relative to other developed nations. I am very concerned that our highest duty in this Congress is to ensure the security and freedom of our Nation and our people. The specifics of what we do here have a material effect on jobs and on prosperity. And that is literally the dignity and sustenance of our families. If we impede enterprise, as would be the case through excessive regulation of end user derivatives, and to wit, a Fortune 100 employer in my district would have to curtail key investment if required to meet capital requirements for end users as may be specified in Dodd-Frank, then we will lose our mission as a Congress and endanger our future as a nation. So I look forward to hearing your comments on how we can relieve that burden from our American enterprise. Thank you. I yield back my time. Chairman Bachus. Thank you. Mr. Dold? Mr. Dold. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Chairman Bachus. One minute. Mr. Dold. I want to thank the witnesses for their time and for coming out today. And I certainly share some of the concerns that have been addressed by some of my colleagues today. Derivatives have been productively and efficiently used for a significant period of time by reducing risk and reducing price volatility, increasing stability. These derivatives markets directly benefited companies, employees, consumers, and our overall economy. In the past several years, certain companies have made some mistakes in the derivatives markets, to be sure. They didn't verify that their counterparties had sufficient collateral. They didn't verify that their counterparties had the ability to pay. They didn't determine whether their counterparties had too much exposure in other derivatives markets or market risk. However, as far as I can tell, the end users did not make these mistakes systematically. And now these end users are faced with the uncertain prospects of margin regulations that sufficiently and unnecessarily change their longstanding successful businesses' models while focusing them to play capital inefficiently. If they are forced to do so, then we will unnecessarily force scarce capital to be unparked unproductively on the sidelines. I believe that we will lose jobs here in the United States, and we will damage our economy. And instead of reducing risk and reducing price volatility and increasing stability for businesses, employees, consumers, and indeed, I believe all Americans, we will get the opposite result as risks that would otherwise have been absorbed into the derivatives markets are passed along. I thank the chairman for the time. And I yield back. Chairman Bachus. Thank you, Mr. Dold. Ms. Waters, for 1 minute. Ms. Waters. Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman. The Dodd- Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act was designed to address the lack of transparency and capital in the derivatives market, to prevent the industry and its clients from needing another taxpayer-funded bailout. Specifically, the legislation calls for the SEC and the CFTC to regulate the OTC derivatives market to pre-approved contracts before clearinghouses can clear them, and to punish bad actors. In fact, the Dodd-Frank Act charges the SEC to promulgate seven rules to implement reforms to the OTC markets. Some critics of the Dodd-Frank Act incorrectly represent that these reforms to the OTC market will result in fewer jobs. On the contrary, creating a system with transparency and regulation allows market participants to know what the rules of the game are and protects them from the impact of reckless trading of the sort that led to the 2008 financial crisis. We saw that impact in 2008. Two years later, we are still seeing the effects of high unemployment, lack of credit, and limited business investment that resulted from the 2008 financial crisis. The Dodd-Frank Act will provide the transparency and regulation the OTC market needs to protect counterparties and taxpayers. In the process, it will save jobs. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and I yield back the balance of my time. Chairman Bachus. I thank you. Mr. Canseco, for a minute-and-a-half. Mr. Canseco. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. And thank you very much for being here today, members of the panel. The breadth of rulemaking as a result of Dodd-Frank is extraordinary. According to the Committee on Capital Markets Regulations, the CFTC and the SEC are both making about 10 times the amount of rules per year than they did before Dodd-Frank was passed. The amount of days it takes for a rule to get from the proposed stage to implementation has been halved at the SEC. These two agencies, along with the Federal Reserve and others, have been asked to take on an incredible task that has serious implications for our financial markets and economy. Dodd-Frank left a great deal of discretion to the agencies. That is why today's hearing is so important. Our job is to ensure that as the Federal agencies write these rules, they do not negatively impact the ability to hedge risk in our economy. From my experiences in the private sector, where I actually worked with the derivatives, I know how important the ability of a company to hedge its risk using derivatives is to our economy and to our consumers. Many of the benefits of derivatives are hidden to consumers. But when our fellow citizens go to the store to buy gas, milk, clothes or whatever else, they sometimes don't realize that the affordability of these products is due in large part to the manufacturer's ability to hedge risk. With this in my mind, I look forward to hearing from today's witnesses on this important issue. And I yield back my time. Chairman Bachus. Mr. Carson, for 1 minute. Mr. Carson. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I welcome the opportunity to review Dodd-Frank to ensure the bill accomplishes what we intended it to do when it was written in this committee last year. However, I am deeply opposed to defunding the bill because our friends on the other side were opposed last year, and continue to be opposed. The bottom line is that no legislation is perfect, and the opposition has a right to propose changes. However, banks and financial institutions have brought reform upon themselves. It was through their carelessness and disregard for the rights of citizens that our economy nearly collapsed and spurred action by Congress in the first place. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I yield back. Chairman Bachus. Thank you. The last speaker on our side is Mr. Stivers, for a minute- and-a-half. Mr. Stivers. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I would like to thank the witnesses for being here today. It is really important that we get Title VII right, both in law as well as regulation. There are companies in my district including American Electric Power who are end users. That company has 4,000 jobs in my district. There are many other companies who use derivatives to reduce risk in their business model. And I am really concerned about the inconsistency between the SEC and the CFTC on their rules and regulations, especially with regard to the definition of a dealer or trader as well as capital requirements. And because this is so important both to reducing risk in our system, cost to consumers, and jobs in our districts, I really look forward to hearing from the witnesses and working with the witnesses to make sure we take a consistent approach that doesn't affect jobs or increase prices but looks out for the safety and soundness of the system. Thank you so much. And thank you, Mr. Chairman, for holding this hearing. Chairman Bachus. Thank you. And now we introduce our first panel: the Honorable Mary Schapiro, Chairman of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission; the Honorable Gary Gensler, Chairman of the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission; and the Honorable Daniel K. Tarullo, member of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors. I want to welcome all our witnesses. Without objection, your written statements will be made a part of the record, and you will each be recognized for a 5-minute summary of your testimony. Chairman Schapiro. STATEMENT OF THE HONORABLE MARY L. SCHAPIRO, CHAIRMAN, U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION (SEC) Ms. Schapiro. Thank you very much, Chairman Bachus, Ranking Member Frank, and members of the committee. Thank you for inviting me to testify today on behalf of the Securities and Exchange Commission regarding our implementation of Titles VII and VIII of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act. It is a pleasure to appear with my colleagues, Chairman Gensler and Governor Tarullo. As you know, these provisions are intended to bring greater oversight and transparency to the derivatives markets and to clear any payment and settlement activities and with that, to increase the stability of our financial system. While implementing these provisions is a complex and challenging undertaking, particularly in light of our other regulatory responsibilities, we recognize the importance of this task, and we are committed to getting it right. These rules are intended, among other things, to reduce counterparty risk by bringing transparency and centralized clearing to security-based swaps, reduce systemic risk, protect investors by increasing disclosure, and establish a regulatory framework that allows OTC derivatives markets to continue to develop in a transparent, efficient, accessible, and competitive manner. Since passage of the legislation, we have been engaging in a very open and transparent implementation process seeking input on the various rules from interested parties even before issuing new rule proposals. Our staff has sought meetings with a broad cross-section of interested parties. We joined with the CFTC in holding public roundtables. And we have been meeting regularly with other financial regulators to ensure consistent and comparable definitions and requirements across the rulemaking landscape. Today, the SEC has proposed nine swaps-related rules. Among them are: rules that would address potential conflicts of interest at security-based swap clearing agencies, execution facilities and exchanges that trade security-based swaps; rules that would specify who must report security-based swap transactions, what information must be reported, and where and when it must be reported; rules that would require security- based swap data repositories to register with the SEC; rules that would define security-based swap execution facilities and establish requirements for their registration and ongoing operation; and rules that would specify information that clearing agencies would provide to the SEC in order for us to determine if the swap must be cleared and specify the steps that end users must follow to rely on the exemption from clearing requirement. In addition, with the CFTC, we proposed rules regarding the definitions of many of the key terms under the Act. Our staff also is working closely with the Federal Reserve Board and the CFTC to develop a common framework for supervising financial market utilities, such as clearing agencies, which are designated by the Financial Stability Oversight Council as systemically important. In the coming months, we expect to propose rules regarding standards for operating and governing of clearing agencies, rules to establish registration procedures for security-based swap dealers and major security-based swap participants, and rules regarding business conduct, capital, margin, and segregation and recordkeeping requirements for dealers and participants. We will also propose joint rules with the CFTC governing the definitions of swap, security-based swap, and the regulation of mixed swap. We recognize the magnitude and interconnectedness of the derivatives market. And so, we intend to move forward at a deliberate pace, continuing to thoughtfully consider issues before proposing and adopting any specific rules. The Dodd-Frank Act provides the SEC with important tools to better meet the challenges of today's financial marketplace and fulfill our mission to protect investors; maintain fair, orderly, and efficient markets; and facilitate capital formulation. As we proceed with implementation, we look forward to working closely with Congress, our fellow regulators, and members of the financial community and the investing public. Thank you for inviting me to share with you our progress on and plans for implementations. And I look forward to answering your questions. [The prepared statement of Chairman Schapiro can be found on page 312 of the appendix.] Chairman Bachus. Thank you. Chairman Gensler? STATEMENT OF THE HONORABLE GARY GENSLER, CHAIRMAN, U.S. COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION (CFTC) Mr. Gensler. Good morning, Chairman Bachus--congratulations on your chairmanship--Ranking Member Frank, and members of this committee. I thank you for inviting me to speak about the Dodd- Frank Act. I am pleased to testify on behalf of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. And I also want to thank my fellow Commissioners and all of the staff of the CFTC for all their hard work and dedication in fulfilling our mission. I also am pleased to testify along with Chairman Schapiro and Governor Tarullo. President Obama announced our nominations on the same day back in December of 2008. And I guess this is the first time we are appearing in public together at a hearing. But it reminds me that in 2008, the financial system and the financial regulatory system both failed the American public. It wasn't one or the other. But I think it was, in fact, both. The effects of that crisis reverberated throughout the American and global economies. In the United States, hundreds of billions of taxpayer dollars were put on the line to bail out the financial system, ultimately to secure the American public's economy. But millions of jobs have been lost and are still lost. Though the crisis has many causes, the unregulated swaps market played a central role. And Congress, I believe, responded by passing Dodd-Frank, specifically Title VII, to bring transparency and to lower risk in the swaps market. The CFTC is working closely with the SEC, the Federal Reserve, and other regulators to implement those features. We also are coordinating our consultation internationally. And we have received thousands of comments from the public, both before we have made proposed rules and after we have made some proposals that inform the Commission. And yes, the final rules will change based on those comments. One area where the CFTC is seeking input is with regard to the implementation of various requirements of margin, which many Members here have raised with us. And in the Dodd-Frank Act, Congress recognized different levels of risk posed by transactions between financial entities on the one hand and those involved with non-financial entities or what many people are calling end users. Consistent with this, consistent with what Congress said that the non-financial end users would be exempt from clearing, we believe at the CFTC that margin requirements should focus only on transactions between financial entities rather than those transactions with the non-financial end users that so many Members have talked about in their opening statements. To adequately fulfill our statutory mandate, the CFTC does require additional resources. The U.S. futures market today, $40 trillion notional size. The U.S. swaps market, roughly $300 trillion, roughly 7 times the size, far more complicated, and it is very important for all the end users to have transparency, openness, and competition. Yesterday, the President submitted his fiscal budget for 2012 that included $308 million in funding for the CFTC. This is essential for us to be able to fulfill our mission. In 1992, our agency had 634 people. It shrank. From 1992 to 2008, it was down to 440 people right in the midst of the crisis. Only last year, with the help of this committee and all of Congress, did we get back to our 1990s headcount, about 680 people. But staff is not enough. Technology is critical. The only way to really regulate these vast markets is with sufficient funding for technology to be efficient. Our small agency has to be efficient, working closely with the SEC and international regulators. Furthermore, I would say that the CFTC's funding, if it were returned to the 2008 levels when we were only 440 people, the agency would be unable to fulfill its statutory mission. Every program would be affected. It would be market surveillance, industry oversight, enforcement. We would be unable to pursue Ponzi schemes and other frauds or market manipulation. Inevitably, we would have to develop a backlog of registration applications or rule reviews or appellate filings and the like. The CFTC, I would contend, is a good investment for the American public. Its mission, ultimately, is to promote transparency, open and competitive markets which lower costs to end users and helps promote economic activity. We will get this margin thing right. We understand congressional intent on that. The CFTC is a cop on the beat that ensures markets are protected from fraud, manipulation, and other abuse. I look forward to working with Congress to ensure that we can accomplish our mission of protecting the public. Thank you and I would be happy to take questions. [The prepared statement of Chairman Gensler can be found on page 277 of the appendix.] Chairman Bachus. Thank you. Governor Tarullo? STATEMENT OF THE HONORABLE DANIEL K. TARULLO, GOVERNOR, BOARD OF GOVERNORS OF THE FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM Mr. Tarullo. Thank you, Chairman Bachus, Ranking Member Frank, and members of the committee. I appreciate this opportunity to provide the Federal Reserve Board's views on the implementation of Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Act. The Board's responsibilities fall into three broad areas. The first relates to consultation and coordination with other authorities, both foreign and domestic. Dodd-Frank requires that the CFTC and the SEC consult with the Board on rules to implement Title VII. In providing feedback to their request for consultation, we have tried to bring to bear our experience from supervising dealers and market infrastructure and our familiarity with markets and data sources to assist the commissions. But important coordination activities related to derivatives regulation also are occurring internationally. Most prominently, the group of 20, or ``G20,'' leaders set up commitments related to reform of the OTC derivatives market that would form a broadly consistent international regulatory approach. The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision has recently strengthened international capital standards for derivatives and created leverage and liquidity standards applicable to them. The Committee on Payment and Settlement Systems is working with the International Organization of Securities Commissions to update international standards for systemically important clearing systems, including central counterparties that clear derivatives instruments, and trade repositories. The goal of all these efforts is to ensure a level playing field that will promote both financial stability and fair competitive conditions by preventing activity from flowing to less regulated jurisdictions. The second task given to the Federal Reserve with respect to Title VII relates to the strengthening of infrastructure. Central counterparties are given an expanded role in the clearing and settlement of swap and security-based swap transactions. If properly designed, managed, and overseen, central counterparties offer an important tool for managing counterparty credit risk and thus can reduce risk to market participants and to the financial system. Title VIII of the Act complements the role of central clearing to heighten supervisory oversight of systemically important financial market utilities. This heightened oversight is important because financial market utilities such as central counterparties concentrate risk and thus have the potential to transmit shocks throughout financial markets. As part of Title VIII, the Board was given new authority to provide emergency collateralized liquidity in unusual and exigent circumstances to systemically important financial market utilities. We are carefully considering how to implement this provision in a manner that protects taxpayers and limits the rise in moral hazard. The third task, committed to the Board by Dodd-Frank with respect to Title VII, is that of supervision. Capital and margin requirements are central to the prudential regulation of financial institutions active in derivatives markets, as well as to the internal risk management processes of those firms. The major rulemaking responsibility of the Board and other prudential regulators under Title VII is to adopt capital and margin regulations for the non-cleared swaps of banks and other prudentially regulated entities that are swap dealers and major swap participants. The Board and the other U.S. banking agencies played an active role in developing the enhanced capital leverage and liquidity regime agreed to in the Basel Committee. These requirements will strengthen the prudential framework for OTC derivatives by increasing risk-based capital and leverage requirements and by requiring banking firms to hold an additional buffer of high quality liquid assets to address potential liquidity needs resulting from their derivatives portfolios. The statute also requires the prudential regulators to adopt rules imposing initial and variation margins on non- cleared swaps to which swap dealers or major swap participants that they supervise are party. The statute directs that these margin requirements be risk- based. Within these statutory constraints and instructions, the Board and other prudential regulators are working to implement the margin provisions in a way that takes appropriate account of the relatively low systemic risk posed by most end users. For example, one approach under consideration is to allow a banking organization that is a dealer or major participant to establish a threshold with respect to an end user counterparty based on a credit exposure limit that is approved and monitored as part of the credit approval process below which the end user would not have to post margin. The Board understands that posting margins imposes costs on end users, possibly inhibiting their ability to manage their risks. The Board also believes that the margin regime should be applied only to contracts entered into after the new requirement becomes effective. Thank you for your attention, and I would be pleased to answer any questions you might have. [The prepared statement of Governor Tarullo can be found on page 323 of the appendix.] Chairman Bachus. Thank you. There were two Presidents in recent history who actually reduced government spending as a percentage of GDP, President Clinton and President Reagan. So I say that in a bipartisan way, one on each side. A part of that was a growing economy, and I think that is going to be the key to us facing our national debt and our deficit. So I want to applaud, Chairman Gensler, your statement today. And I think, if I heard it correctly, it is that all end users would be exempt from CFTC clearing and margin requirements-- Mr. Gensler. Yes, sir. Chairman Bachus. --the way they are on the over-the-counter swaps? Mr. Gensler. Consistent to how Congress exempted the non- financial end users from clearing, as we take up these rules at the CFTC, which we hope to in the near term, that the same end users--(h)287 is the provision in the statute, would not have any margin requirements. It is really consistent with what Congress did on the clearing requirement. The financial company consistent with what Congress did might be. Again, we are still sorting through these proposals to put them forward to the public and get comments. Chairman Bachus. I know Members on the Majority feel it is critically important that we don't impose margin requirements or clearing requirements on end users. And by end users, you said non-financial companies, these that do not hedge risk as a part of their inherent business. Mr. Gensler. That is correct. Hedging is a really important thing. Tens of thousands of commercial end users use these products, used them successfully before 2008, and need to use them for our economy to prosper. Dodd-Frank at its core though promotes transparent, open, and competitive markets. And markets that are transparent and competitive get the lowest pricing. I believe Dodd-Frank at its core will lower costs to these commercial end users because of the transparency and competitiveness and also because they will be less prone to risk. The American public did have to stand behind that $700 billion in the TARP. So it is a balancing that actually Congress put forward. Chairman Bachus. Of course, the $700 billion, none of that was a result of commercial non-financial end users, yes? Mr. Gensler. But it did at its core have a risk from the unregulated swaps marketplace, particularly credit default swaps. And then we all know the story of AIG. Chairman Bachus. I appreciate you and I--do you need the cooperation of Congress? Do we need legislation to clarify that these over-the-counter swaps will not be required to have margin requirements for clearing? Mr. Gensler. We at the CFTC believe that the Act is well- written and it gives us sufficient authority to ensure that such margin requirements on the swap dealers do not cover the non-financial end users. But that authority is there for us to move forward. Of course, it will be subject to notice and comment, public comment. Chairman Bachus. Governor Tarullo, you looked at that provision. Do you agree? Mr. Tarullo. Mr. Chairman, what we have done is to read the statute as it is written. The statute as it is written tells us that each registered swap dealer and major swap participant for which there is a prudential regulator has to meet minimum capital and minimum initial and variation margin requirements. That applies broadly and there is obviously no exception provided for any class of counterparties. However, the statute goes on to say that these standards shall be risk-based. And bringing to bear the risk-based or systemic risk-based perspective, which we have tried to bring to our activities on Title VII generally, what we are thinking in terms of is a risk-based approach to margin requirements which would recognize that for end users, generally there is much less risk associated with derivatives transactions. So in essence we will create--if this approach turns out to be the one we adopt, and it is the one that is being worked on internally now--these thresholds within which or under which margins would not be required. And precisely because end users in general present substantially less systemic risk--and in many cases no systemic risk--the threshold for end users would be substantially higher than those for financial market participants. Chairman Bachus. All right, thank you. Let me very briefly, I think the proper sequencing of your rule needs to have a definition of swap and commercial risk prior to some of your other definitions. Are you aware that you are going to need to define those terms fairly soon? Mr. Gensler. The statute defines many terms. Jointly with the SEC, we made proposals in December on ``swap dealer'', ``major swap participant'' and the like. The comment period actually closes February 22nd. And what we encourage the public to do, and we posted this on our Web site, is if you have comments on any of our other proposals at the CFTC, even if the comment period is closed, please include those comments in the definition comments so that we can consider them. We do have discretion, even after a comment period is closed, to get those comments to the right files, to the right team. I know as a Commissioner, we will read them. Chairman Bachus. But the definition of ``swap'' and ``commercial risk'', your other definitions are going to depend on that-- Mr. Gensler. We also put out the definition of ``commercial risk'' in December-- Chairman Bachus. Okay. Mr. Gensler. --and that is open through the same period of February 22nd. We look forward to hearing broadly from the public whether we got that right, consistent with what Congress did. Ms. Schapiro. I would just add, I think we all share your concern that we get the sequencing right so that particularly those who have to comment understand the full scope of the potential implications of all the rules on them, whether or not they are going to be determined to be a dealer or a major swap participant or some other kind of participant in the marketplace. So we have gotten a lot of that done. The not-so-narrow but important issues of swap, mixed swap, security-based swap are-- they are basic statutory definitions, but obviously there is more work for us to do there and we are very committed to getting those out quickly. Chairman Bachus. Thank you. Ranking Member Frank? Mr. Frank. Thank you. Let me ask Mr. Gensler, you talked about, and Mr. Tarullo has concurred and I assume Ms. Schapiro does too, that we are not going to see margin requirements imposed on end users and they don't have to clear. I do want to address though the perception some may have that therefore nothing has changed. You did mention the transparency. So what will be the effect with regard to end users? Ms. Schapiro. Even the uncleared swaps have to be reported to the swap data repository and public-- Chairman Bachus. Which means the price will be made public? Ms. Schapiro. Yes. Price and calling information, yes. Mr. Frank. Which is what we--I will tell you that I had a visit that validated that in my mind from a couple of people in the financial industry. It was an older one and a younger one from two companies. And the younger one said that they had these problems. And I said, we are not going to go after the end users and all we are talking about is price being made public. And he said yes, that is what we don't like, then people could come in ahead of us. And I asked if that meant that he was afraid of competition? And his older colleague said, we are not really pressing that argument. So I just want to make it clear we are not talking about margin requirements and clearing requirements. We are talking about reporting requirements, which have, if I am correct, the advantage first of all of giving the end users some ability to get a better price because they will not now be captives and they will get to know what other people are charging. And secondly, you won't have an unknown quantity of those in the economy. Will there be mechanisms for us therefore keeping track of what the totals are that are out there, Ms. Schapiro? Ms. Schapiro. I think the transparency is really the critical piece here because it allows market participants to understand, particularly with respect to post-trade transparency, at what price those transactions have occurred and that will encourage price competition. There is a provision that will allow for blocked trades to be disseminated on a delayed basis so that the concern about the potential for front running a large position or front running the hedging of a large position should be able to be dealt with through the delayed dissemination there. Mr. Frank. Because, as someone said, we are talking about making it more pro-competitive-- Ms. Schapiro. Absolutely. Mr. Frank. Because people can't be competitive if they don't know the number. Now, I want to just ask you about the budget proposals. You have been urged to take more time but also be more thorough. At the levels that have been proposed in the budget that came out of the Appropriations Committee, Mr. Gensler, what effect will that have on your capacity to accommodate what members of this committee are asking you to do? Mr. Gensler. The number, I believe, was to take us from $168 million in the continuing resolution down to $112 million. We would have to have a significant curtailment of our staff and resources. We would not be able to police or ensure transparent markets in futures or swaps. Mr. Frank. So that is--the new responsibilities you get for the derivatives market, including primarily, as you said, the financial part, the AIGs, the credit default swaps, you would not be able to undertake those responsibilities? Mr. Gensler. There is no doubt in my mind. We would have to go from 680 staff, actually smaller than 440 if it was for the whole year because we are already halfway through the year. We would have to shrink even further than that. Mr. Frank. Ms. Schapiro, you were given in the bill new responsibilities, investor protection and elsewhere. What would the effect of the proposed budget be on your ability to carry those out? Ms. Schapiro. I am sorry. It will have a very real effect on the SEC's ability not just with respect to Dodd-Frank implementation but also with respect to our core mission, which is already being impacted by the continuing resolution. But most particularly, we have responsibilities now for hedge fund examinations starting after hedge funds are registered in July. So we have to build a registration capability. We have to be able to examine and have examiners deal with hedge funds. We will be recipients of large amounts of data that are required under the Act for systemic risk reporting purposes for hedge funds, being a mechanism for managing-- So let me say, because I don't want to go over the time, and the systemic risk in the data is important again. Ms. Schapiro. --right and over-the-counter derivatives surveillance. We cannot rely on an SRO in that space. That task will fall to the SEC. Mr. Frank. I remember when Mr. Bernanke told us in 2008 that he was going to have to advance $80 billion to AIG. And a week later, they needed another $90 billion or $100 billion because nobody, including AIG, had any idea what the exposure was. And that presumably will no longer be the case. But just to summarize with regard to hedge funds and derivatives, many of us believe they were insufficiently, not just regulated, but we didn't have much information about them, that they were a blank slate. And we have with hedge funds fairly light regulation but registration and monitoring. With derivatives, the financial entities are regulated but the end users are not. But I take it that if you were to get the budget levels that were proposed in the bill that came out of the Appropriations Committee, neither one of your agencies would be able to do anything significant regarding your new responsibilities involving derivatives and hedge funds. Is that correct? Mr. Gensler. That is correct. We would basically be involved in a large reduction in force, about 65 percent-- Mr. Frank. Right, but you--the effect of that would-- Mr. Gensler. --the end users wouldn't benefit from any transparency. Mr. Frank. Ms. Schapiro? Ms. Schapiro. I don't know whether it will be in reduction of force or technology decline, but we will certainly not be able to operationalize many of the rules that are we implementing as a result of the new law. Mr. Frank. Thank you, and I should mention just one more thing. The total amount of money for the two agencies together that you are asking--that is in the President's budget is how much? Ms. Schapiro. President sought for the Securities and Exchange Commission $1.4 billion. Mr. Frank. And Mr. Gensler? Mr. Gensler. In 2012, 308, in 2011, 261. Mr. Frank. All right, so for this current year, about a billion-and-a-half. And Ms. Schapiro, how much money does the SEC take in to the Federal Government? Ms. Schapiro. I believe last year our budget was $1.1 billion and we brought into the Treasury on just from transaction fees about $1.3 billion to $1.4-- Mr. Frank. So at the expense of getting adequate regulation, we are going to turn you into a profit center. Thank you. Chairman Bachus. Thank you. Thank you, Mr. Frank. Mr. Hensarling? Mr. Hensarling. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Chairman Gensler, in your testimony, I believe you said something along the lines that unregulated swap markets played a central role in our economic crisis. I am assuming you are mainly alluding to AIG. Is that correct? Mr. Gensler. Yes, but also I think it helped accelerate the asset bubble in housing, credit default swaps more generally. Mr. Hensarling. Okay, just to remind us all of the record, in March of 2009, the head of the OTS, Mr. Polakoff, testified to a question that I asked. Again, in retrospect it wasn't the lack of authority. It wasn't the lack of resources. It wasn't the lack of expertise. You just flat out made a mistake. Is that a correct assessment? Answer, yes, sir. In 2004, we failed to assess how bad the mortgage economy, the real estate economy would become in 2008. So at least the regulator in question thought they had the authority and the expertise. I peeked into the testimony, into the testimony of the panel to follow yours. So to some extent, I am going to try to foist a bit of a conversation here. We are going to hear from a gentleman, Craig Reiners with the MillerCoors Company. And quoting from his testimony, ``A requirement for end users like MillerCoors to post margin to its counterparties would have a serious impact on our ability to invest in and grow our business. Though end users are not directly subject to the trading requirements, excessive capital requirements imposed on our counterparties aimed at forcing end users onto regulated exchanges, execution platforms and clearinghouses could significantly increase our cost.'' Chairman Gensler, a provision that was supposedly aimed at Wall Street may be increasing the cost of a six pack. And I think you just got the attention of the American people. [laughter] Has your agency considered the pass-through cost concerns in your economic analysis as you develop these new rules? Mr. Gensler. I read very closely the testimony of MillerCoors. We have met with MillerCoors. We are aware and focused on the cost of a six pack because we also oversee agricultural markets. And I would say our intention is not to have margin requirements apply to an end user such as MillerCoors. So very directly to his point, we are very focused on his testimony and his concerns. Mr. Hensarling. We will be monitoring your progress at the local convenience store. I also saw testimony from Mr. Terry Duffy, executive chairman of the CME Group. And he testified, ``Entities such as CME often cannot fully anticipate the meaning of a proposed rule when that proposed rule is reliant on another rule that is not yet in its final form.'' For example, rules dealing with the definitions of swaps, security-based swaps, swap dealer as you well know, Mr. Chairman, the list goes on. Mr. Duffy goes on to say as such, ``They must be established before interested parties can meaningfully address other proposed rules.'' So your Commission, I believe, has proposed some rules, comment periods have closed on other rules, and yet many commentators don't even know without the proper definition clarity whether or not certain rules will apply to them. So how can you have a meaningful comment period, Chairman Gensler? Mr. Gensler. I have read Mr. Duffy's testimony very closely as well, and we have indicated to Mr. Duffy, with whom we are meeting at 2:45 today, that we want all of the CMEs and all of the public's comments. If these rules have been staggered partly because we are humans, we need to just move them out. But if you have comments on earlier proposals where closed periods have happened and they relate to this definitions rule, include them. Send them in. We will use our discretion. We will distribute them. We will get them into the right comment files, just like this entire hearing, I think we are going to put in our comment file. Everything that you all have to say is important to our process as well. Mr. Hensarling. I think the gentleman makes a good argument. I hope you can find a better way to run a railroad because I think again we are dealing with trillions of dollars. We are dealing with capital. We are dealing with jobs. And I just think it is so critical that we have an effective rulemaking process. I see my time is winding down. One more question for you, Chairman Gensler. I understand that you are advocating the adoption of position limits even for passive investors such as commodity index funds. Is that correct? Mr. Gensler. Consistent with the Dodd-Frank Act, we have put out a proposal in January and we look at forward to the public comments. So I think it is consistent with what-- Mr. Hensarling. Does the CFTC have any data to indicate how the proposed position limit rule would affect the operation of these passive funds? Mr. Gensler. We publish data regularly on passive funds or index investments in the marketplace, and that is on our Web site. We have included some of that data in the preamble in the rule, but we look forward to the public comment in the proposed rules on agricultural, metals, and energy position limits. Mr. Hensarling. I see my time has expired. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Chairman Bachus. Thank you. Ms. Waters? Ms. Waters. Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman. I am very concerned about the representation that Dodd-Frank is going to lead to fewer jobs. And I understand that many of those who are critics have been citing a study by the Business Roundtable that claims that the margin requirements in Dodd-Frank will result in 100,000 fewer jobs. First, just quickly, let me ask each of our witnesses today. First, Ms. Schapiro, have you seen this study? Ms. Schapiro. That was released yesterday, so yes, I did have an opportunity to look at it, but I have not studied it in detail. Ms. Waters. Mr. Gensler, have you seen the study? Mr. Gensler. I read the survey, the Keybridge survey last night around midnight on the Web. Ms. Waters. And Mr. Tarullo, have you seen the study?' Mr. Tarullo. I did read it. Yes, ma'am. Ms. Waters. Can you tell us how effective regulation of the derivatives market can actually help to save jobs? Let me start with Mr. Gensler. Mr. Gensler. I think that at the core, we lost over 7 million jobs in this country because both the financial system and regulatory system failed the test and swaps were part of that. So I think it saves jobs by just making the whole system safer for America. It also helps end users have more transparency and lower costs, competition in the marketplace. As long as we handle I think congressional intent on this margin and many of the other end user issues, which we want to work with you on, transparency promotes economic activity, transparency, and competition in the market. Ms. Waters. Thank you. Ms. Schapiro, I agree with Mr. Gensler that failed regulation caused a loss of jobs. So how can better regulation cause a loss of jobs? Can you discuss a little bit how better regulation, effective regulations can help to save jobs? Ms. Schapiro. I think effective regulation can promote capital formation, which is in essence the creation of jobs. When companies feel that they can go to the market and raise capital, that their stocks will be priced fairly, that investors will have the opportunity to invest in their company, buy their shares of stock and sell those when they want to, it enables companies to raise the money necessary to create jobs. By the same token, when investors have confidence in the safety and the soundness of our financial institutions and the regulatory regime, they have a level of comfort in investing. So I think there are a number of studies that will show that good regulation, intelligent regulation--it is not overregulation, not underregulation--can actually lower the cost of capital for industry. Ms. Waters. Mr. Tarullo? Mr. Tarullo. Ms. Waters, I would just say that the study to which you alluded acknowledged that what it did was a kind of quick and dirty economic assessment because the study didn't have access to all the data they would need to give a more sophisticated response. What they basically did was to say, ``Based on our survey, here is what we think the relative level of utilization of derivatives is. And we are going to multiply that by a margin requirement which we think might be imposed. And that gives us the cost--that the cost of the margin requirements--'' Ms. Waters. I am sorry, so you are saying it was not a scientific study? Mr. Tarullo. They couldn't--they were not being misleading in the least. They basically just said, ``We are going on the basis of a survey and extrapolating. We don't really have the data.'' But I think, ma'am, the most important point to make is that they were assuming that there would be margin requirements applicable to all these end users surveyed. And what you have heard this morning is that is not going to be the case. Ms. Waters. And so can you tell us how effective regulation of the derivatives market can actually help to save jobs? Mr. Tarullo. Yes. From our point of view again, which is one of systemic risk and trying to contain systemic risk, I think the keys are always watching for leverage and transparency. And because in the absence of transparency, you have ineffectively operating markets, and as we see, you can have runs during crisis periods. And in the presence of excessive leverage, you can have collapses of institutions and markets as well. So I think a well-honed, well-conceived regulatory system in the financial sector is one that is designed to allow the allocation of capital to its most productive uses. Ms. Waters. So basically, all three of our witnesses at the table today really do believe that an effective regulation of the derivatives market can actually help to save jobs. Is that correct? Mr. Gensler. Yes. Ms. Schapiro. Yes. Mr. Tarullo. Yes, although, of course, ``effective'' is what everybody is going to be discussing as we go through this regulatory process. Ms. Waters. Thank you very much. I yield back. Chairman Bachus. Thank you. Mr. Royce? Mr. Royce. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Gensler, as to the application of the CFTC proposed rules to foreign counterparties and to foreign dealers, I was going to ask you about a concern here over regulatory arbitrage and over the fact that they are going to wait this out. You implement your policies here. We see more and more derivatives business go to Europe. And at the end of the day, we have American financial companies severely disadvantaged vis-a-vis their foreign competitors. I mentioned in my opening statement that in the long run, onerous rules that are unnecessary will without doubt drive capital to non-U.S. markets. And you have testified here that you are in contact with regulators in Europe, you expect them to follow the American approach, but how do you have those concrete assurances? Do we have a Memorandum of Understanding with European regulators? Tell me how you assure us of that fact? Mr. Gensler. We are working very closely--all three of our agencies are working very closely with the Europeans and Asian regulators. We actually share our pre-proposal documents, memos-- Mr. Royce. Right. Mr. Gensler. --and drafts with them. I think, depending upon budgets, I guess, but I will be back over in Europe in March in front of the European Parliament possibly. So we are working very closely. Their proposals, I am optimistic, are quite consistent on clearing this end-user approach, swap data repositories, the dealer regimes. They are a little bit time-wise behind us, a little later than us. Mr. Royce. Yes, they are going to be later. And I don't know where Brazil and Toronto and Singapore are going to be here, but I think it is going to be very hard to try to convince us that American firms are not going to lose business to European competitors when that is already happening now. Let me ask you another question, and that has to do with the fact I know today the SEC and the CFTC, you are saying they are trying desperately to get this collaborative environment. But on the most important rules, you are failing to get that kind of collaboration between the two agencies. The differences in the derivatives markets you oversee are virtually nonexistent. There is a lot of overlap there in products and users. And the fact is that you insist on producing two very different sets of regulations here. And if this is the end result, end users and investors are not going to be better off. It is going to be a boon for foreign companies. I will just give you a few of the--in terms of what is discussed in the business press--real-time reporting, where the agencies have different rules for the definition of what real-time means. First, block trade definition and reporting time for block trades, the number of data fields that must be reported is different, which entity is tasked with submitting trade information to the public, all different. Second, we have the block trade definition where the SEC wisely asked for further public comment and will likely embrace different definitions, depending on asset class and liquidity, whereas, the CFTC has offered a rigid, one-size-fits-all approach that many argue is overly restrictive. And then third, we have the swap execution facility rules, where the CFTC requires sending a request for a quote to at least five liquidity providers. The SEC takes, I think, a more reasonable approach here in allowing the customers to choose how many liquidity providers it will request quotes from. But the bottom line is, it is different in every case. And I would like your comment on that as well, if you would. Ms. Schapiro. I would be happy to comment on that, Congressman. I would say a couple of things. One is that we are working very closely together and there are many more things that are the same than that are different, although, you have pointed out, I think, some important differences. Mr. Royce. I picked up 50-some in the business press that have been pointed out-- Ms. Schapiro. I will-- Mr. Royce. --where they differ. Ms. Schapiro. We are still at the proposal stage so there is lots of opportunity through the comment process and through our extensive meetings with industry and others to bring these rules closer together. And when we propose something, for example, it is different than the CFTC. We actually ask people what would be a better approach? Is the CFTC's approach a better, more realistic approach or is the SEC approach better, or is there yet a third way to go about dealing with this? I would say also that there are some differences in the markets that we are regulating. The security-based swap markets, which really just represents about 5 percent of the notional value of the swap markets, trade quite differently than the interest rate markets do, for example. And so, to some extent, the differences in the marketplace will dictate--some things that are different. But I will--let me please agree with you though, that where our rules are going to fall upon institutions that are contracting and working in both markets, it really is incumbent upon us to make them as close to identical as possible so that institutions aren't put under the burden of two separate sets of rules. Where the rules go to, for example, differences in the way orders might interact within the marketplace, there might be some justification for slightly different rules because of the nature of the products that are being traded. Mr. Royce. Mr. Chairman, thank you. Mr. Chairman, I have questions for the record, without objection, on position limits, which were meant to curtail speculation but could end up hitting the long-term passive investors. I meant to ask that question, but, I will put that in the record and then get the response from the witnesses. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Chairman Bachus. All right. Thank you, Mr. Royce. Mrs. Maloney? Mrs. Maloney. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and I thank all of the panelists for your public service and your testimony today. In the continuing resolution, there is--literally on the Floor this week, there is a drastic cut in funds from what the President requested in his 2011 budget for the SEC and the CFTC. And our Republican colleagues have proposed that the SEC budget and the CFTC budget be cut back to 2008 levels. Now, that is the level and the year that the economy cratered and fell. And I can hardly imagine that any of my colleagues are pleased with the level of oversight that was performed by our regulatory agencies in 2008. So cutting them even more than what they had then, I feel will make it impossible for them to implement Dodd-Frank and be responsible regulators. According to the Inspector General of the SEC, the Republican proposal would force the agency, the SEC, to cut roughly 600 in staff. Is that correct, Ms. Schapiro? Ms. Schapiro. I believe that is correct, although I will say, I think the budget proposal coming out of the House is not to put the SEC all the way back to 2008 levels, although it does represent a cut off of the continuing resolution number. Mrs. Maloney. I would say that if you put it in perspective with the numbers, a total loss of household wealth as a result of this ``Great Recession'' has been estimated to be approximately $14 trillion and the over-the-counter derivatives market is valued at about $600 trillion. And in 2010, the GDP of the entire world was just over $74 trillion and the infamous flash-crash on May 6th temporarily wiped out over $1 trillion. So it seems to me rather penny wise and pound foolish not to invest in the agencies that are required to come forward with the new rules, the new studies, and to prevent the Madoffs of the future. Now, as I understand it, and correct me if I am wrong, the Dodd-Frank bill calls for 95 new rules from the SEC. Is that correct? Ms. Schapiro. It depends a little bit on how you count but that has been the ballpark estimate, yes. Mrs. Maloney. And 61 from the CFTC, right? Mr. Gensler. We think it is more on the order of 45. Mrs. Maloney. Forty-five? Okay. Mr. Gensler. That is right. But I don't know. People can count different ways. Mrs. Maloney. And how many studies are you required--I know the bill had 60 studies--to do? Ms. Schapiro. The SEC is required to do 20 studies--more than 20 studies and to create 5 new offices within the agency. Mrs. Maloney. How in the world are you going to do that with a reduced budget? Can you hire the people to oversee the new--the derivatives and everything that you have to do? Ms. Schapiro. No. Clearly, we will not be able to operationalize the rules that we are promulgating and ultimately adopting under Dodd-Frank under that budget scenario. I will say, if we were able to hire people, we can get them. We are getting amazing talent willing to come to the Securities and Exchange Commission at this time and work with us on all of these important issues. But we are under a hiring restriction right now. Mr. Gensler. And I would just say this: The staff of the CFTC has been excellent under this uncertainty of the budget. They are just doing terrific work. I think we will be able to, working with the SEC and the public, continue writing rules, but there is no doubt that in 2012, we will not be able to oversee the markets and ensure the transparency in the markets. If we were taken back to 2008 levels, however, then we would be in a very different circumstance because we are in a unique circumstance where we were just growing back to where we were in the 1990s, so taking us back to 2008 would have to entail, unfortunately, significant reductions in force. Mrs. Maloney. The OTC derivatives market is valued at about $600 trillion, and in 2010, the budget for the CFTC was just $169 million. So as my colleagues call for more oversight and accountability, we certainly need to give the tools to the oversight agencies to get the job done. So I certainly hope that my colleagues on both sides of the aisle will support appropriate funding for the CFTC and the SEC. There has been talk that we are not competitive in the world. Some of my colleagues said that we have a competitive disadvantage, but with Basel II the capital requirements are the same. Is that correct? Our capital requirements are not higher, are they, Mr. Tarullo? Mr. Tarullo. That is correct. Mrs. Maloney. So we are in an even playing field on the capital requirements and the leverage requirements? Are we on an equal playing field there? Mr. Tarullo. Yes. We have internationally agreed upon a leverage ratio, yes. Mrs. Maloney. So do you believe that our markets are in some way disadvantaged-- Mr. Tarullo. First-- Mrs. Maloney. --because we have regulations? Mr. Tarullo. Certainly with respect to-- Mrs. Maloney. But a regulation that didn't appear to work in 2008. Chairman Bachus. Mrs. Maloney, we will let him answer the question. Mrs. Maloney. Okay. Yes. Mr. Tarullo. Certainly with respect to capital, we have been able to standardize across all the members of the Basel Committee. There is obviously still discussion going on about the standards to be applicable to central counterparties as such. Those are the ones that Chairman Gensler was referring to a few moments ago. Chairman Bachus. Thank you. Mrs. Biggert? Mrs. Maloney. But my time has expired. Mrs. Biggert. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. This first question is for Chairman Gensler. Currently, the CFTC is looking at setting position limits on swap data. And my concern is--and I know I asked this question, I think of you and of Secretary Geithner in 2009--whether there was an analysis that looked at the critical and necessary data regarding this? And it seems--I am concerned that--and in fact, multiple futures exchanges have raised concern that without this critical data, there will be improperly set position limits which would negatively impact liquidity and effective price risk hedging. And it seems like you are putting the cart before the horse if you don't have the study of this data that is so important. And, I think it--not analyzing it before you put a new regulation in, and my concern, not only here, but there is talk of some dealers looking at moving abroad, and we are going to lose those jobs. Could you comment on that? Mr. Gensler. The proposal the Commission put out in January is consistent with the congressional provisions that we put something out with regard to the physical commodities, metals, energies, and agriculture. The agency has had, in working with the exchanges, position limits and most of these for what is called the spot month, but also looking at the other months, what is called the back months. And there really would be three steps to this. A proposal phase--we have asked the public for comment on the very data that you are talking about. We are going to be well-informed. Final rules will not be taken into consideration until we get comments. We got 8,200 comments on an earlier position limit proposal a year ago. No doubt, we will get a lot of public input, and it will be helpful. We changed the proposal based on those earlier comments. We will probably change the final based on these comments. The third phase is actually getting data from the market when the swap data repositories are stood up, and we anticipate that that is going to take some time. Mrs. Biggert. But that is really crucial in how you are going to be able to set those limits so that there won't--there won't be something done before you get that data? Mr. Gensler. We have actually anticipated that the proposal says that even once it is a final rule, it would not be implemented until there is data upon which to apply a formula. Position limits historically have been done based on a formula of the total size of the market. How big is the market and so-- Mrs. Biggert. But my concern is that we are going to have some of these traders that are going to go abroad because they can't wait, with all the comments and then to have the--to set that later on. It seems like you are putting the cart before the horse in not having the data before you really set those limits. Mr. Gensler. Again, Congress asked us to put proposals out. We are soliciting comments. It is very important to get comments on these 28 physical commodity markets. We have had position limits in the agricultural markets for decades. There were positions in the energy markets and metals markets in the 1980s and 1990s, in fact, all the way through 2001. And we look forward to public comments. But it does say in the proposal that they would not go into effect until they are based on the actual statistics on the size of the futures market as well as the swaps market. Mrs. Biggert. Okay. Now Congress may have been wrong in how they designated that should be done, but--let me go on to another question. Chairman Schapiro, the Department of Labor has proposed a new definition of ``fiduciary'' which would significantly modify 35 years of established law defining who is an investment advice fiduciary and then the SEC has completed their 913 study which looks at the standard of care required of broker-dealers and investment advisors providing personal investment advice about securities to retail customers. Both of these proposals will be setting advice standards for retail IRAs. Have the DOE and the SEC consulted on these proposals or is there something that could come out differently as opposed to-- Ms. Schapiro. Congresswoman, you are right, we published our investment advisor broker-dealer fiduciary study several weeks ago. We were very clear there to say that it does not implicate the fiduciary standard under ERISA. And you are also correct that the Department of Labor has recently proposed to expand the fiduciary definition under ERISA and that has the potential to affect some ongoing arrangements and relationships between broker-dealers and their IRA clients. We are very prepared to work with the Department of Labor. We have offered any information or expertise that we can provide to them about the regulation, in particular of broker- dealers in the context of advising ERISA accounts. And we will continue to reach out to them and see if we can be of help. Mrs. Biggert. But have you actually been in contact with them? Ms. Schapiro. Yes. Mrs. Biggert. Okay. Thank you. I yield back. Chairman Bachus. Thank you. Mr. Watt? Mr. Watt. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I would like to use my time here to kind of zero in on the part of this that I had the most involvement in, Section 733, which became known as the Watt-Meeks amendment, and ask a couple of questions about the proposed regulations that cover that section. It seems to me that one of the great accomplishments of Dodd-Frank was to pull derivatives trading out of the shadows and into the sunlight, requiring standardized swaps to be traded on swap execution facilities or exchanges that create pre-trade price transparency. Section 733, known as the Watt-Meeks amendment, even includes a rule of construction and directs the SEC and the CFTC to update their rules to require the use of the best technology available for creating pre-trade price transparency. We were intentional in not asking for flexibility for swap dealers. When swap dealers had flexibility before Dodd-Frank, they chose the least transparent method of trading, which was telephone calls. So instead, Congress said that swap execution facilities must give multiple participants the ability to trade swaps by accepting bids and offers made by other participants using the best technology for pre-trade price transparency. Chairman Gensler, it seems to me that your draft rule comes pretty close to doing what we were trying to get to. Am I correct that you require a swap execution facility to include a central trading screen where everyone can see everyone else's prices? Am I clear that you are not going to allow swap dealers to trade only on some dark corner of the platform where one participant asks for quotes that only he or she can trade and that dealers will have to put their prices on the central trading screen? Am I correct that is what you intend? Mr. Gensler. It is correct that the proposal brings transparency, that the facilities have to allow any participant to put a live bid or offer. So everybody can see that. Mr. Watt. Okay. All right. Mr. Gensler. But no one will be required to do it. There is no market maker obligation. It is just if you want to, you get a choice. But the end users would also have a choice if they didn't want to put a firm bid or a firm offer, they could also use a request for quotes. Mr. Watt. All right-- Mr. Gensler. But you have that-- Mr. Watt. --and then let me go to Chairman Schapiro. Because it seems to me that your proposal differs and hasn't taken Congress' directive as seriously as the CFTC is, because you are allowing security-based swap execution facilities--and I am quoting from your proposal ``could simply enable every participant to choose to send a single request for a quote to just a single liquidity provider,'' which seems to me not to be what we are trying to get to here. Are you all interpreting these things differently? Or are you setting up a situation here where you are going to have the potential for a race to the bottom with the two agencies potentially interpreting this thing differently or setting up a different set of rules and enabling participants to argue that the lowest common denominator ought to be at play here? Ms. Schapiro. I don't think so, Congressman, and we have taken it very seriously but we have taken a slightly different approach, I think in part dictated by the fact that the security-based swap market, which were swaps on single issuers or of narrow indices of securities, are really quite different than the much more liquid foreign exchange or interest rate or commodity swap markets. So we thought that it did dictate for a slightly different approach in our proposal. And again, it is just a proposal. We would not permit single dealer platforms under our proposal. What we would do is define SEF as a trading platform that allows more than one participant to interact with the trading interest of more than one participant. And under that, the quote requesting party must have the ability to send a single request for quotes to all the participants on that trading platform. But if that party also seeks to limit the number of participants to whom their quote goes to, they would have, at their option only, not at the SEF's option, the capability to do that. Mr. Gensler. And if I might say, where the two agency's proposals line up is both of them say that to be an execution platform, you must allow any market participant, even if you all weren't in Congress and you set out to be a market participant, you could get in and make a live bid, a live offer, put your capital at risk and compete. Markets work best when they are transparent and there is competition, and both rules have that. There is a little bit of difference on this request for quote approach, and we are looking for public comment to see if they should be synched up as well. Mr. Watt. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I yield back. Chairman Bachus. Thank you, Mr. Watt. Mr. Garrett, the subcommittee chairman? Mr. Garrett. I thank the Chair. And so, when you think of all the rules that have already come out and all the regulations, the proposed and the mounds of paperwork that have come out in just a short period of time, with these agencies not specifically funded to the level that they want to be funded at, I can only hazard a guess what we would be looking at right now if they had all the money that they really asked for. I guess the takeaway from this hearing so far is, from the other side of the aisle, the solution to all the problems that we have is to simply spend more money on it. And I guess the takeaway from this side of the aisle so far is the solution to the problems is we want to get it right as far as the rules or regulations that these agencies are promulgating. If you look at past history. If you look at reg--NMS and you look at--compare that to what we are doing today. Now that was regs--and rules coming out of the law of around 80-some-odd pages. We are looking at 1,000-some-odd pages. That took, I am told, from 4 to 6 months from rulemaking-- period of time, here. There they did it for approximately 15 months, and there they took over, I guess, oh, about a 3-year period of time to roll them all out and actually get into implementation. Here, we are compressing this into a much, much shorter period of time and a much larger area of the environment where we are going to ask the industry to come up with an entirely new architecture, structure, build new complex--new technology systems that they don't have yet, create a whole new operational process they don't have yet, a whole new legal documentation process that they don't have yet, creation of new clearinghouses, SEFs, connectivity between all these entities. All of that wasn't there in the past. You are trying to do it now in an extremely expedited manner. So it goes to the point I raised before. If we do it in the way--in the timeframe that you are talking about now, won't this lead to a seizing up of the derivatives market? Won't it lead to a sending of the derivatives market overseas, or at the very least won't it create unfair advantages between the big players in the marketplace and the very small players who cannot simply keep up with what you are trying to do? I will leave that to Mr. Gensler right now. Mr. Gensler. We have asked, in the midst of each of these rulemakings, and we have asked more generally, to hear from the public on the phasing of the implementation. Congress allowed us some discretion, both agencies, that no rules should become effective sooner than 2 months after the July date, the implementation date. But it could be later. So for the same reason that you just raised, Congressman, we want to hear from the public as to what rules can be done a bit sooner which rules need more time. Because there is a cumulative cost of this. It is a paradigm shift, as you are referring to, and I think we want to, as you say, get it right. Mr. Garrett. Ms. Schapiro? Ms. Schapiro. I would agree with that. I think, unlike the statutory deadlines that we have been working through, we have much more discretion with respect to the implementation timing and sequencing. So that we can put the rules out and make them effective in an order that actually makes sense for the industry in order to build systems, develop compliance-- Mr. Garrett. Right, so can both of you, realizing that the feedback that you are already getting on all those points, can both of you sit here today and tell us that you would like Congress to give you more time? Because we know we have a deadline of July. Do either one of you think that you can do this appropriately and meet the deadline of July and still have fairness to the marketplace that we are talking about? Mr. Gensler. I think we actually already have the discretion on the implementation. Mr. Garrett. On implementation, but how about the rule promulgation? Mr. Gensler. I feel that with the significant crisis of 2008, which was a very real crisis, and the excellent staff at the CFTC and Commissioners, what timing has been put out there is doable. We are human. Some of these will happen after July, no doubt. Mr. Garrett. That is not in the statute. It is-- Mr. Gensler. It is not like a firm deadline that I understand. We are going to get this right and some of these will be after July. But we are also going to take up final rule writing in the spring and summer. Mr. Garrett. One aspect of it, and I will ask both of you this, is under the--President Obama's Executive Order instructing certain Federal agents to review regulations to ensure they do not stifle job creation and make the economy less competitive, this doesn't apply to either one of you, I don't believe, by the Executive Order. But is it part of your process that you are going through, that you wish to comply with that Executive Order so you make sure we don't stifle jobs and we don't hurt the economy? I will start with Ms. Schapiro. Ms. Schapiro. Sure. Congressman, as you and I have discussed, the terms of the Executive Order don't apply to the Securities and Exchange Commission. But we have determined that it makes sense for us to try to act as though they do. I should say right off the top that much of what is in there, we already do. We already comply with the Paperwork Reduction Act, the Regulatory Flexibility Act-- Mr. Garrett. So you are going to try to comply with it? Ms. Schapiro. --cost-benefit analysis. But in terms of being able to go back and look at some of the rules that have been around for many, many years, and see if they are having an unintended consequence given all the changes in our economy and in technology, in particular, we want to do that. We want to look at the impacts on small businesses. And we have been very focused in our rulemaking over the last year, in particular, to make sure that where we can give delayed compliance dates for small business, we are trying to do that and be as accommodating as we possibly can. Mr. Garrett. Mr. Gensler? Mr. Gensler. We took a very close look at the Executive Order. Our practices are consistent, though Congress has given us directions on how to do cost-benefit analysis. It is called 15A of our act. So we have to follow congressional mandate rather than an Executive Order. In terms of looking at our entire rulebook, we do plan to do the 120-day plan where we would tell the public how we are going to look at our entire rulebook, even if it is not related to Dodd-Frank. Chairman Bachus. Thank you, Mr. Garrett. Mr. Sherman, before I go to you, Mr. Hinojosa has a brief unanimous consent request. Mr. Hinojosa. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I am asking unanimous consent that my statement be made a part of the record. Chairman Bachus. Yes, and all statements will be. Mr. Hinojosa. Together with two letters, one by Richard Whiting of the Financial Services Roundtable dated February the 7th, and the other is a statement by Craig Reiners of MillerCoors Corporation. Chairman Bachus. Thank you, and let me say this to all members, at the end of this hearing, you can submit any letters for the record, if you would like. Thank you. Thank you, Mr. Hinojosa. Mr. Sherman? Mr. Sherman. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Dodd-Frank redirects the CFTC to adopt commodity position limits in order to prevent excessive price fluctuation and, of course, deliberate market manipulation. I know some of my colleagues have asked about this or other aspects of this particular provision. As part of this authority, the CFTC is entitled to consider exemptions for different classes of investors to allow for enhanced protections without unduly restricting investors' options. I am concerned that the Commission's proposed regulations make no distinction between investor classes, treating market speculators the same as ordinary commodity index fund investors. Is that the way these regulations should work? Or should there be a distinction between commodity index funds that buy and hold, versus those that are in and out of the market in days, hours or minutes? Mr. Gensler. We put out proposed rules that, as Congressman Sherman has said, did not make a distinction because the statute doesn't make a distinction in that way. The statute does make a distinction between bona fide hedgers, which in the statute, and this has been true in our statutes since the 1930s in some regard, relates to having some physical commodity in a merchandising channel. Congress, in Dodd-Frank, tightened that definition. So we have to comply with the intent of Congress. And it tightened it with regard to swap dealers. Swap dealers were, under various No-Action letters from the CFTC, able to be bona fide hedgers. And Congress tightened that to say, only to the extent that you actually are helping somebody on the other side hedge something who has the physical commodity in a merchandising channel, and so forth. So we are trying to take this up as Congress decided. But we look forward to the public comments on it. It is going to be a very thick comment file. Mr. Sherman. Every time I ask a regulator about something, they always say it is Congress' fault. Has your Commission recommended a technical fix? Or do you think that it is appropriate as a matter of policy not to distinguish between the in-and-out investor on the one hand and the commodity index fund on the other? Mr. Gensler. We have not recommended a technical fix. This was something that was debated in many committee hearings, maybe not in this committee, but in other committees, about the role of index investors and so forth. But we do look forward to the public comment and your comments and, as to getting this-- Mr. Sherman. Yes, I may disagree with you on whether the existing statute gives you the flexibility here. The statute does say you are supposed to adopt limitations as appropriate. And I look forward to working with your attorneys to convince them that we don't need the technical fix. Assuming your attorneys do come to you and say, ``Yes, you can distinguish between classes of investors in these regulations,'' as a matter of policy, should there be a difference between the index fund on the one hand and the day trader on the other? Mr. Gensler. I think I am just going to say I am going to keep an open mind. With 8,200 comments on the last position limit rule, I think this one is going to be such a thick comment file and I am going to keep an open mind as a Commissioner, to these views. Some have recommended there be class limits on all indexers. Some have recommended that there should be no limit. So there is a wide set of comments that we are already receiving on index investing. Mr. Sherman. I hope you are able to give a clear and more definite response to some of my other colleagues' questions. But on this one, I just gather that you are keeping an open mind as to both the law and the policy. And I yield back. Chairman Bachus. Thank you. Let me say this: This first panel will be excused at 12:15. And we will seat the second panel. And I know Mr. Reiners from MillerCoors is sitting there on the first row, ready to testify. So we will find out what your announcement this morning does to the price of beer, whether--if it helps it or hurts-- Mr. Gensler. Hopefully, the transparency will keep beer for all Americans well-priced. Chairman Bachus. I think the margins requirements may help. Mr. Gensler. I hope so. Chairman Bachus. Mr. Neugebauer? Thank you, sir Mr. Neugebauer. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Gensler, I have some serious concerns about the high cost and the severe consequences and burdens that Dodd-Frank is going to be putting on a number of different agencies. And I have asked all of the entities that are affected by Dodd-Frank to furnish us information of what is the startup cost and what is the continuation cost of just implementing Dodd-Frank. I have heard from your counterparts on either side. I got a nice thank-you letter for me sending you a letter. But I am looking for a little bit more robust and detailed response to that letter from your agency, as well. Mr. Gensler. I think that you received it this morning. And I apologize if maybe it is just in transit. But I would be glad to take any questions about the letter. Mr. Neugebauer. Thank you. I think one of the things we saw in the President's budget that he laid out is that he is estimating that it is a $6.5 billion number to implement Dodd- Frank, maybe going to hire over 5,000 new people. I believe that number, when we do the calculations and I think when we get some history on that, I think it is going to be a much bigger number than that. But one of the things I am concerned about is, for example, the CFTC's chief compliance officer rule requires firms to designate a chief compliance officer; establish and administrate a complete new set of compliance policies, including implementation and compliance with hundreds of pages of business conduct rules; prepare an annual report to regulators; perform a review of every requirement under the Commodity Exchange Act, and your agency's estimate of what this would cost the market participants is $13,600. Everybody else out there who is about to implement this said this is going to cost millions of dollars to comply with that. And so one of the things that I think is flawed about this and the fact that we are accelerating this process and putting these rules out at record levels is we are not doing any cost-benefit analysis of these rules. And we have underestimated, in many cases, the cost of complying with these. So as we talk about Dodd-Frank, in the sense that we think this is going to be a wonderful thing for transparency and integrity in the markets, the question is, what are the markets going to look like when we get through making them more transparent and operating with integrity? Are they actually going to be incrementally more transparent and is there going to be incremental integrity in the markets? But also, the cost of achieving that? And what I am very concerned about is, long term we are going to be pushing those markets to other places. In fact, in the past few weeks, I have sat down with some of the people who are participating in these markets. These markets are looking for a pressure relief valve because they are looking at these kinds of costs. And for our smaller participants, this is an extremely big problem. And so I guess the question I have to you is, what kind of cost-benefit analysis is going on as you are churning these regulations out to actually determine the cost of compliance and the impact of that cost of compliance to the markets? Mr. Gensler. And if I might also answer your earlier question, in the letter and in the budget, this agency has talked about $308 million, $77 million related directly to Dodd-Frank, and about 240 positions directly related to Dodd- Frank in the 2012 numbers. We as an agency are mandated by our statute, Section 15A, on how to do cost-benefit analysis, which was adopted many Congresses ago. That has directions, actually rather detailed, about taking into consideration the price discovery function, the lowering risk, about the integrity of markets to which you just referred. We also asked, in each of our rules, a question to please help us. As commenters come back with the cost, because those are important for our consideration before we move to final rules, to actually hear from the public. I think the figure you might have referred to--though I don't know every rule by heart, is within the Paperwork Reduction Act piece of it. We asked for comments on those costs as well as the cost-benefit analysis costs so that as we go forward to consider final rules, we get the public's thoughts on that, as well. Mr. Neugebauer. So are you doing cost-benefit analysis? Mr. Gensler. Oh, absolutely, in compliance with our statute. Mr. Neugebauer. When in the process are you doing that, before you send out the rule or after you get comments from the rule? Mr. Gensler. It is an ongoing process, but it is pre- proposal, it is part of the proposal phase, and then it is informed further by commenters as we move to the final rule, as well. Mr. Neugebauer. Is that cost-benefit analysis made available to the people that you are requesting comments for so they can record-- Mr. Gensler. Yes. Mr. Neugebauer. --kind of respond to your analysis and-- Mr. Gensler. Yes. And I don't know if Chairman Schapiro--we are under different guidelines, but yes. Ms. Schapiro. We publish our cost-benefit analysis. Our economists develop data the best they can. They might use survey information. They might look to analogous rulemakings to see what costs were associated there. We see comments on the cost-benefit analysis. And it is, as Chairman Gensler said, further informed by the comment process. Oftentimes the people who have the best handle on costs are going to be the industry charged with complying with the rules or implementing the rules. And so we are highly reliant on their information. Mr. Neugebauer. So is this-- Chairman Bachus. I thank the chairman. And I will thank the gentleman from Texas. Mr. Neugebauer. Thank you. Chairman Bachus. Mr. Meeks? Mr. Meeks. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Gensler, I just have a couple of quick questions that I wanted to ask. I was pleased to see you refer to the cooperation with foreign counterparts in your prepared testimony. The Dodd-Frank Act, of course, recognizes the limits of the U.S. jurisdictional authority by clarifying that provisions of Title VII do not apply to activities outside of the United States unless they have a direct and significant connection with activities in, or effect on commerce of, the United States. My first question is, what steps have you taken or do you propose to take or intend to take to ensure that United States firms can compete internationally on a level playing field with their foreign competitors and foreign jurisdictions? Mr. Gensler. We have had extensive dialogue and discussion with regulators around the globe and with the very industry that you are referring to, the large international banks. The international banks that are not headquartered here, that are in Europe and in Asia, have largely come in and say they anticipate registering as swap dealers to offer swaps to U.S. counterparties. So whether you are a European bank or Asian, you want to offer swaps to U.S. counterparties. The U.S. banks, of course, have considered that they would be registering, sometimes not once, but maybe two or three different legal entities would register. But at the core, we are working with the other regulators sharing our drafts with them. Of course, we have a statute that has been passed. And the only other country that has one so far is Japan. The European Parliament is taking their proposal up this spring. Mr. Meeks. So there is continuing dialogue, do you think, because I am interested especially with the-- Mr. Gensler. There is continuing dialogue, but there is also, through international forums, something that Chairman Schapiro I think co-chairs, IOSCO, which is an international forum. There are panels that the Federal Reserve sits on. We are just a small agency. We are usually the junior member. But these international forums have actually pretty aligned and consistent rules on clearing, for instance, data repositories. And we are also going to be entering in to Memorandums of Understanding with at least a half a dozen other foreign regulators. Mr. Meeks. Let me also--because you also noted in your testimony that the CFTC recently proposed position limits on several commodities. And I have been told that the experience in London shows that it could be difficult to ascertain the true position in aggregate of traders. Do you believe that sufficient transparency exists for the CFTC to effectively enforce such limits? And can you speak on the impact of position limits in curbing speculation in commodities such as oil? Mr. Gensler. I believe with the passage of time, there will be such transparency because the statute allows that all the information for swaps will come into data repositories. We will benefit from that information. And that is why the rule has a bit of delayed implementation until some of that information is in. The CFTC is not a regulator that regulates prices. We are a regulator that ensures transparent, open, competitive markets that have integrity. And so it is in that context that position limits have been used to just ensure, in essence, that there are not concentrated positions, particularly in the spot month where corners and squeezes in physical commodities can happen. Mr. Meeks. I will tell you one concern that I have, how do we protect the United States from speculation, especially on things like oil occurring outside of the United States, which then has a direct impact on us? Could you tell us what we could do to try to curb and monitor the risk of speculation occurring outside of the United States? Mr. Gensler. If I might, speculators have a role in the markets. Hedgers and speculators need each other and meet in a marketplace. This has been true in our markets even when the corn producer or wheat producer wanted to know, how do I hedge my crop, come the harvest? There was a speculator on the other side. So speculators are part of the commodities markets. They are part of the swaps marketplace. Position limits authority, which was put in place in the 1930s, was to guard against burdens that might come from excessive speculation. One of those burdens that we know about like corners and squeezes, or that the size of the crowd is so small that there are only a handful of speculators that might have concentrated positions in a marketplace. I don't know if that answers your question. The oil market, the energy markets are global. The financial markets are global. Risk does not know any geographic boundary in today's modern, technological, and communications world. Mr. Meeks. I am out of time. Chairman Bachus. I thank the gentleman. Mr. McHenry? Mr. McHenry. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. And to follow up on my colleague from New York's questions, we have missed having a Federal Reserve comment on this question about international competition. And to that, Mr. Tarullo, looking at the derivatives marketplace, do you foresee a major shift in markets other than the United States as a possibility? Mr. Tarullo. Congressman, I suppose anything is possible. But I think--what I think you are hearing today is that there are two kinds of processes under way, which actually intersect to a considerable degree. The first is a domestic regulatory reform exercise driven by statute and implemented by the agencies you see in front of you and some others as well. And the second is an international process, which pre-existed the crisis, but which has been energized and extended because of the crisis. As I noted in my response to an earlier question, on the capital regulatory side we have been able to achieve a considerable harmonization of the kinds of requirements that would be applied to derivatives as well as to other credit and market risk exposures. In the payment systems arena, I think there is an awful lot of interest among other countries because, frankly, they have seen what can happen when you don't have a transparent, well- collateralized market functioning in derivatives, or indeed, any other set of areas. So while I can't sit here today and tell you that I think the agencies have collectively gotten the level of agreement, much less implementation, they would like to see, my impression in this area--and it is only an impression--is that things are moving in the right direction. I think it is important to note that each of the other financial centers that people talk about as growing as the emerging market world grows is in a jurisdiction which is a member of the Financial Stability Board and the Basel Committee. So these people are at the table. Mr. McHenry. Thank you. Ms. Schapiro, in a Financial Times article today, the Muni Enforcement Division Chief is quoted within--from one of your SEC employers--employees--is quoted as saying that muni disclosures--or the municipal bond market has become, ``a top priority of the SEC.'' Can you comment on that? Ms. Schapiro. Sure. When we set out to reform how our enforcement program worked 2 years ago, one of the goals we said was to create specialized units where we could have staff focus on particular types of cases become very deep, very expert, more efficient in bringing just those kinds of cases. And municipal securities was an area we thought was particularly important for us to focus upon. We have seen, as you have read in the paper and seen in some of the cases we have brought, real concern about the quality of disclosure on municipal issuers to investors. And we don't have the authority at the SEC to dictate or to tell municipal issuers the way we can corporate issuers what they must disclose. We tried to get at that through the intermediaries that buy and sell municipal securities. So we will tell broker-dealers, you can't buy and sell these securities unless you ensure that the municipal issuer is making the following kinds of disclosures. So that is an indirect tool. It is all we have really with respect to the disclosure except for our anti-fraud authority. So to the extent that a municipal issuer is misleading in its disclosure documents about the state of its pension liabilities or something else that is material, we are able to pursue that as a matter of anti-fraud. Mr. McHenry. Is there a challenge between the government accounting standards and the financial accounting standards-- Ms. Schapiro. There is-- Mr. McHenry. --a real challenge? Ms. Schapiro. --a challenge. We can't dictate what accounting standards they use-- Mr. McHenry. GASB. Ms. Schapiro. --either. Many municipalities use GASB. Some use FASB and I--there are other alternatives out there. But we--so we have a--sometimes have a lack of comparability as a result of not having required accounting standards. Mr. McHenry. And that lack of comparability it--does that pose a challenge in understanding disclosures-- Ms. Schapiro. It-- Mr. McHenry. --and enforcement? Ms. Schapiro. --it is a challenge for investors, we understand. The other problem is the timing of disclosure. We can't say that you must report year-end results within 90 days or a set period of time. And so some municipalities disclose their financial results a year or even more, in some few instances, later. I will say one of the big improvements in this area has been the creation by the MSRB of the EMMA System, which allows for a great deal of electronic disclosure. And I think that has made life a bit easier for investors. Mr. McHenry. Is there more authority that the SEC would need to have accurate disclosures? Ms. Schapiro. There is authority we would need. We have been in the process--although for resource reasons we have had to shut it down or pulled in field hearings around the country. We did one in San Francisco and one in Washington to collect the information about the state of the municipal markets, particularly, with respect to disclosure and sales practices, accounting, and other issues, so that we could build a really strong record for what we think the real issues are, and how we might come to Congress and ask for you to help us in solving those. While we haven't continued the field hearings at this point, we are still collecting lots of comments and meeting with lots of people who have an interest in this market. And I suspect we will come to Congress at some point with some proposals. Mr. McHenry. Thank you. Chairman Bachus. At this time, I will recognize Mr. Lynch. But before I do, the witnesses who are on the second panel, if you want to be excused for 10 or 15 minutes and just be back at 12:15, you may want to take a break now. Mr. Lynch. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. And again, I thank the witnesses. I was reading this morning in one of the reports that the notional value of the derivatives market is about $600 trillion. I am also concerned that 97 percent of the U.S. market in derivatives outstanding is actually represented by just 5 commercial banks. They have a very concentrated market here. They also have, not surprisingly, 97 percent of the clearinghouses owned by just 5 banks. I had an amendment in the Dodd-Frank Bill that was sort of watered down in the Senate regarding the governance of these clearinghouses, and the ownership of these clearinghouses. And I know that we have a proposed rule that is out there. But there are some real conflict-of-interest risks out there, concerns. One is that these clearinghouses could operate--being operated by these five banks, basically, could operate for their own benefit. They could operate as cartels. They could restrict the products that are cleared, who gets to play. And probably the most dangerous risk is that we are going to allow these clearinghouses to set their own risk management standards. We are going to allow them to establish their own collateral requirements. And while we have taken that risk and dealt with it on the bank's side, we are going to allow in these clearinghouses this small group of individuals to establish how much collateral they are going to be required to put up. And, it is just ironic that we are seeing a huge shift in risk from the banks that are now being dealt with. But we have a gap here, in my opinion, on the clearinghouse side. Chairman Schapiro, I know you have been doing great work on this, as all of you have. But where are we on this proposed rule? And do you believe that we are heading in the right direction on this? Ms. Schapiro. Thank you, Congressman. I think we obviously have taken very seriously the requirement that we seek to mitigate conflicts of interest in both the clearing agencies and the swap execution facilities. And we have identified the same risks you have. The risks that too few products will actually clear, the risk that a small group of dealers if they are in control might limit access by other participants to the marketplace. And the concern that they could lower risk management controls to reduce their collateral requirements. So what the SEC did was to propose two alternatives for how to deal with ownership in voting within clearing agencies. And we have set some numerical thresholds. One alternative would say that no single participant can vote more than 20 percent of the voting interest. And all the clearing agency participants collectively would have an aggregate cap of 40 percent. And then, we would have some requirements on the board of directors and on the nominating committee to have independent directors on those. And the other alternative was to say no individual participant could have more than 5 percent of the voting interest. There would be no aggregate cap. But the board would have to be majority independent and the nominating committee solely independent. What you can see by that is we are trying a couple of different triggers and combinations to see if we can try to mitigate the conflicts of interest that exist. And at the same time, the access rules that we will ultimately propose that will provide for as maximum access to clearing agencies as possible is yet a third way to help mitigate the conflicts. I can tell you that almost nobody liked our proposals. We got lots and lots of-- Mr. Lynch. That is a good sign. Ms. Schapiro. I am not sure. Some people thought that they weren't tough enough and some people thought they-- Mr. Lynch. Oh, okay. Ms. Schapiro. --were way too tough. And we have to balance this with the need to have entities willing to invest in these entities so that we can have robust and strong clearing agencies. So where we are in short is that we are working through many, many comment letters and continuing to refine our approach and continuing to talk and meet with people. And I couldn't honestly tell you right now where we will land Mr. Lynch. Okay. Thank you. Mr. Gensler? Mr. Gensler. I would associate my remarks with Chairman Schapiro. But I think on the point of access, Congress said that clearinghouses have to have that open access, meaning membership has to be broadened out. The futures marketplace and the securities marketplace have pretty open access to clearinghouses in each of the spaces. The swaps marketplace has been more concentrated. The Congressman is absolutely correct on that. And so we proposed some rules in December to try to open up that membership consistent with what Congress said-- nondiscriminatory access. These access provisions are critical. We want the public comment, but I suspect there will be some commenters opposed and some for. Mr. Lynch. If I could suggest, rather than just having independent directors who might be agnostic, I think what might work in that context is actually having competing commercial interests on those boards, not necessarily adversarial but having competing interests. That will work as a regulatory force in sort of balancing out the operation of these clearinghouses. I think that is what we have to get at. Ms. Schapiro. I think that is an excellent point and we actually have fair representation requirements in other contexts that would, for example, have institutional investors be represented on the Board. And so that is something we are very interested in. Chairman Bachus. Thank you. And I think we have-- Mr. Lynch. Thank you. Chairman Bachus. --gone over a quite a bit, so thank you. Mr. Lynch. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Chairman Bachus. What we will do is we will take two more on each side, in fact it, would it be okay if we took three more on each side? Would that be okay with the panelists? And so, we will take three more on each side. Mr. Luetkemeyer? Mr. Luetkemeyer. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Tarullo, in your testimony you say that a much discussed part of the Act is the requirement that banks push portions of their swap activity into affiliates or face restrictions to their access at the discount window of deposit insurance. I guess my question is, what percentage of--I think the gentleman, Mr. Lynch, a minute ago made a comment that 97 percent of the trades are done by 5 percent or 5 banks. Is that basically correct? Mr. Tarullo. I think that may be a little bit high. I would say it depends on the market. In the commodity swaps market, it is far more diverse, with many more participants. Mr. Luetkemeyer. Okay. Mr. Tarullo. In the interest rate market, it is a pretty common rate. Mr. Luetkemeyer. Okay, the point I want to get out though is the risk that the banks have with these entities that are under their corporate umbrella that would be exposed to FDIC insurance. I think it is imperative that we get those out so we minimize exposure not only to the banks but to the taxpayers, and I am wondering where you are at with that and how your rulemaking is going on there. Mr. Tarullo. The rulemaking is a joint rulemaking, of course, by all the regulatory agencies. And we don't have a proposed rule on that out yet. I would be happy to get back to you with the status of where we will be. Mr. Luetkemeyer. Okay. I think that is very important because I think otherwise we are getting the taxpayer on the hook again for some risky behavior that was the cause of the problem. And we still have them there rather than getting it out of the depositor's pocket. Mr. Tarullo. And Congressman, sorry, but as one of your colleagues was asking earlier about the coordination of the rulemaking, of course this is somewhat related to the Volcker Rule rulemaking as well because you have the same set of issues of activities being moved out of organizations. Mr. Luetkemeyer. Okay, along that same line though with other Federal entities that have branches here in the United States and then have access to the Fed window, how do you minimize our exposure to them through this rulemaking authority? Mr. Tarullo. Actually, Congressman, as the statute is drafted, it appears as though the exemption that is provided for insured depository institutions for some kinds of derivatives activities--government securities and agencies and high quality bonds--would not be applicable to domestic branches of foreign banking institutions. So actually, there is an asymmetry there, which has been brought to our attention by foreign governments. Mr. Luetkemeyer. Okay. In your own testimony, you say that they may require foreign firms to recognize their existing U.S. derivatives activity to a greater extent than U.S. firms. Mr. Tarullo. Right, that it might require them to restructure in order-- Mr. Luetkemeyer. Right. Mr. Tarullo. --to have it outside of any-- Mr. Luetkemeyer. Okay. Mr. Tarullo. --insured depository institution. Mr. Luetkemeyer. I guess the question is, how concerned are you with the ability of foreign entities to be able to access our Fed window and have our taxpayer dollars involved? Mr. Tarullo. Congressman, all borrowing at the discount window is fully collateralized with haircuts. And that applies regardless of who is accessing the discount window. Also, of course, discount window access is contingent upon supervision, which ensures that we or our colleagues in the other banking agencies have adequate knowledge of the liquidity and capital position of the institution accessing the discount window. So it is only when there is supervision here and when we have full collateralization with appropriate haircuts that discount window lending is possible. Mr. Luetkemeyer. Are you looking to revise those rules and the circumstances around them right now with what is going on in Europe? Mr. Tarullo. Not provoked by anything going on in Europe, pardon me. We are of course always looking at the appropriate haircut levels and whether there is a need to refine our discount window access features. But as I say, any accessibility is going to be based upon an entity present here in the United States which is supervised here in the United States. Mr. Luetkemeyer. Okay, thank you. My time is about up here. I just have a really quick question for basically all of you. One of the things that is of concern to everybody here today is end users. You all recognize that they were not a part of systemic risk of the problems that were in 2008? Do you--is that an agreed-to statement or is that not? Mr. Gensler. They didn't cause the problems. They ultimately were-- Mr. Luetkemeyer. Were caught up in the problem? Mr. Gensler. They got caught up into it. Mr. Luetkemeyer. Okay. Mr. Gensler. --and part of that is to make sure they are not-- Mr. Luetkemeyer. Okay, I am running of time. I understand that, but by the same token, if they are not part of the problem, you raked them into the problem. And yes, they are--by doing this you now--if we don't go with the letters of intent from Senator Dodd and Senator Lincoln about what was going on here with regards to not imposing some sort of other barriers to end users, we may get there. And I think this should be a very narrowly focused ruling and regulatory mandate from you and not impose other additional risks or concerns onto the end user. Mr. Gensler. I am agreeing with you that the CFTC does not intend to have a requirement of margin with these non-financial end users. Mr. Luetkemeyer. Okay. Mr. Gensler. But they did get caught up in the problem. Mr. Luetkemeyer. Chairman Schapiro, I assume you agree with that? Ms. Schapiro. We haven't formulated any proposals in this area yet at the SEC, but I think it is safe to say we are extremely focused on this concern that has been raised multiple times this morning. The end users likely to be using the very narrow category of swaps that we regulate are going to be financial institutions-- Mr. Luetkemeyer. Okay, my comment is they are not the problem, so don't make them the problem-- Ms. Schapiro. We are not going to make them the problem. Mr. Luetkemeyer. --by imposing rules and regulations that they don't need, okay? Thank you. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Chairman Bachus. Thank you. Mr. Miller. Mr. Miller of North Carolina. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I have a question or two about the ``take my ball and go home'' argument that if the regulations here are unpalatable here in the United States or for that matter even if we coordinate with European systems and have similar regulations that some other countries might become host to derivatives trading, which reminded me of how reinsurance is regulated. Reinsurance companies that are in actual markets are beyond the reach of State regulators, but State regulators get at those markets by their requirements on their insured, the company's insurance companies domesticated in their State. If they want to get credit for solvency regulation purposes for reinsurance contracts, the reinsurance companies have to meet certain requirements, basically that they be able to pay on the reinsurance contracts. Governor Tarullo, how are derivatives, credit default swaps in particular but derivatives generally, treated for purposes of safety and soundness regulation now? Mr. Tarullo. Right now, Congressman, they are subject to two kinds of capital requirements. First, a trading or market risk that is the value of the derivatives goes up and down regardless of who the counterparties are. Mr. Miller of North Carolina. Right. Mr. Tarullo. And second, with respect to counterparty or credit risk, that is if I have a derivatives transaction with you, I rely on your creditworthiness to be able to perform. But we have both kinds of capital regulation in place. Mr. Miller of North Carolina. Okay. So if American financial institutions purchased derivatives, credit default swaps or other derivatives from a market that was neither transparent nor had collateral requirements, you would be in a position to deny those contracts credit as an asset and perhaps still consider them as a liability? Mr. Tarullo. Or certainly we are in a position to require appropriate capital set aside depending on the identity of the counterparty. That is absolutely true-- Mr. Miller of North Carolina. Okay. Well-- Mr. Tarullo. --so long as we regulate the U.S. institutions. Mr. Miller of North Carolina. The reinsurance regulation through States, through the insurance companies proves to be fairly effective regulation. Do you have any doubt that you will be able to avoid circumventing all U.S. laws by your regulation of safety and soundness of financial institutions? Mr. Tarullo. I think two things. One, with respect to regulated U.S. financial institutions, we are in a position to understand what they are doing and to require them to have appropriate safeguards in place depending on their counterparties. That is not to say with respect to all derivatives activity that we would be in a position to ensure that it was being conducted in a safe and sound fashion. But the CFTC and the SEC have another regulatory scope and then, as we have all said, we are in discussions with other important financial centers to make sure that they, too, are putting some of these things in place. If I could add one thing, Congressman, there is a degree to which counterparties are attracted to markets that are well supervised-- Mr. Miller of North Carolina. Right. Mr. Tarullo. --precisely because they give assurance that these trades will be completed in a timely fashion. I think people have always understood that the success and liquidity of our securities markets in the United States was in no small part due to the fact that the New York Stock Exchange on its own imposed a lot of requirements on transparency. Mr. Miller of North Carolina. Derivatives are frequently justified as risk management, but according to witnesses who sat at that table in the past, only about 10 percent of derivatives contracts involve a party that actually has any interest in the underlying risk, has any risk to manage. And there have been stories, rumors at least that in many cases companies have bought large credit default swap positions for when they were in a position to cause default and have done that. An example, again, a rumor that is denied by Morgan Stanley was that they were bondholders for one of the largest banks in Kazakhstan, which was taken over by the government of Kazakhstan. And the bond agreements provided that the bondholders could require that the bonds be paid immediately. All the bondholders initially said, ``Don't worry about that. If you are making the payments, that is fine.'' And then Morgan Stanley changed their mind and demanded immediate payment, which the bank could not do, causing a default. The rumors were that Morgan Stanley had bought large credit default swap positions and benefited greatly from the seeming-- what appeared to be the illogical conduct of precipitating default of a performing debt. There are other examples of--where at least arguments that Goldman Sachs was in a position to know things about AIG's solvency that their counterparties did not know. Should there be--what protections are there now for that kind of insider-- what might be considered insider trading in the securities arena with respect to credit default swaps? Ms. Schapiro. The credit default--we have actually prosecuted one case with respect to credit default swaps being invoked in insider trading. I will say the problem that you are talking about is really what we call the anti-creditor problem where you have more of an incentive to see the institution against whom you are holding insurance fail than you do as a bondholder even to work out their problems in an orderly way. And it is a distortion certainly in the marketplace and it is an area that we have been quite focused on as we look at issues around things like empty voting in the proxy context and more broadly at the reporting and other requirements. Chairman Bachus. Thank you, Mr. Miller. Mr. Posey? Mr. Posey. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I can't help but think the best fix for future crises is to have some accountability for the first crisis, for the cause of the first crisis. And I believe you know this is coming, Chairman Schapiro, what kind of accountability have we had at the SEC with the people who helped cause the last crisis to date? Ms. Schapiro. Congressman, I think you know that we have worked tirelessly over the last 2 years to try to reform the Securities and Exchange Commission and to make it an agency that is worthy of the public's-- Mr. Posey. I have a limited amount of time. Has anybody had their wrist slapped yet? Ms. Schapiro. I understand. As you also know, most of the employees were-- Mr. Posey. Wait, please, just--has anyone had their wrist slapped yet? Has anyone been reprimanded? I know nobody has been fired or put in jail but have we blamed anybody? Have we actually told anybody they are responsible for doing wrong and slapped their wrists yet? Ms. Schapiro. Most of the employees involved are gone. For the remaining employees involved with Madoff against-- Mr. Posey. That--listen-- Ms. Schapiro. --whom discipline was recommended, we are-- Mr. Posey. --that is like saying-- Ms. Schapiro. Completing-- Mr. Posey. --a burglar left the neighborhood to burgle another neighborhood. Chairman Bachus. All right. Mr. Posey. Mr. Posey, if you could let the chairman answer the question and then-- Mr. Posey. She is not answering it, Mr. Chairman. Ms. Schapiro. I am. We are concluding the appeals process for the final stages of those employees against whom discipline was recommended. That should be completed shortly. Mr. Posey. Thank you. So the answer is just no. Ms. Schapiro. The answer is the disciplinary process, which is laid out in Federal law and is one which I am beholden to follow is winding its way-- Mr. Posey. I know there is some kind of unwritten rule about giving a yes or no answer here but it would have saved a whole lot of time. Thank you. Mr. Gensler, how comparable do you think the community-- Chairman Bachus. Let me say this to all the members. I think that the witnesses are not on trial. And I think they are due a certain amount of decorum and respect. I know that these are intense questions or they are emotional questions, but I do believe the Chairman was trying to answer the question. And I am not talking to any one member. I am just saying I think it is important that this body treat the witnesses with the dignity and respect that they are due. So I appreciate it. Mr. Scott? Mr. Scott. Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Gensler, at last week's agriculture-- Chairman Bachus. Was he through? Oh I am sorry. Mr. Posey, I apologize. You were not through. You have additional time. Mr. Posey. Mr. Gensler, do you think the Commodity Futures Trading Commission was culpable in any way in the cause of the last crisis? Mr. Gensler. I think the entire regulatory system failed the American public, so I would have to include all of us regulators, in a sense and yes, in the broadest sense. I think the futures marketplace worked very well--so the futures marketplace did not fail. Mr. Posey. I appreciate the ``yes'' answer, thank you. Has there been any disciplinary action taken against any of the employees who were culpable in your agency? Mr. Gensler. No. Mr. Posey. Thank you for the direct answer. Governor? Mr. Tarullo. I agree with Chairman Gensler that there were widespread problems in the regulatory structure and then in the implementation of the regulatory structure by the regulatory institutions. What the Federal Reserve has tried to do is to determine how, with the changes in the law, and with what was learned from the last crisis, we can have more effective supervision going forward. So there have been lots of changes, both at the Board and at Reserve Banks in terms of reordering supervision, who is in charge, which people we have working on which matters. There haven't been any disciplinary proceedings. I wasn't at the Board at the run-up to the crisis, but Congressman, I am not aware of misconduct of any sort. What I am aware of is the collective failure of our regulatory agencies, including the Fed, to determine what was needed and to have the resolve to go and do it. Mr. Posey. Thank you. Does effective regulation involve government stopping businesses from making bad decisions? Just a quick yes or no from each of you if possible. Ms. Schapiro. ``No'', unless it is going to hurt investors. Mr. Posey. Okay. Mr. Gensler. ``No'', unless it is going to break the law. Mr. Tarullo. It is ``no'', unless it puts Federal taxpayer funds or the safety and soundness of the financial system at risk. Mr. Posey. Okay. And then thirdly, I think we all know, but I would just like to get your answer on this. Is it possible to stop somebody from failing and still allow them to succeed in the free enterprise system, to guarantee nobody fails? Ms. Schapiro. No. We should not guarantee that nobody fails. We should allow institutions to fail. Mr. Gensler. I think there has to be a freedom to fail. I think there will be banks that fail in the future as there have been for centuries in the past. Mr. Tarullo. I agree. Mr. Posey. Thank you very much. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I yield back. Chairman Bachus. I thank the gentleman. Governor Tarullo, I think, pointed out that he was not at the Board during the financial meltdown or the events leading up to it and that is also true of Chairman Gensler-- Mr. Posey. Me? Chairman Bachus. No, I am not talking about--Bill, there is nothing--I am not talking about you. I promise this has nothing to do with your remarks. I was just telling the new members that Chairman Schapiro was not there, and Chairman Gensler was not there, and they inherited quite a mess. So Mr.--who is that--Mr. Green? Mr. Scott. Scott. Chairman Bachus. Mr. Scott, I am sorry. Mr. Scott. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Gensler, last week I asked you about this concept of margin separation, if you recall the Agriculture Committee meeting, and how it could potentially raise the cost of clearing with only a small amount of management risk management benefits. I still feel it could be very expensive for market participation if directed towards a problem that does not seem to exist since we are not requiring the same customer protection in future clearinghouses which have never failed. And I know you answered at that time that it was only preliminary, which led me to believe you are reviewing that and taking a look at it. So I want to explore it a little bit further with you with these questions. First of all, can you please tell me what the CFTC's rationale for using the advanced notice of proposal rulemaking was? Did someone specifically, did someone explore this issue and ask you for this particularly, because it was not included in the Dodd-Frank Bill? Mr. Gensler. The Dodd-Frank Bill says that for swaps that brought into clearing, the funds that the people put up shall not be comingled. And then it goes on to say, except for convenience. We had a roundtable to answer your question. We had a roundtable on this whole topic in the fall and numerous parties from the asset management side who have had segregated collateral accounts would like to continue to have that. I would say some from the clearing community and dealing community did not. And they all raised very thoughtful considerations. So we thought we would put out what is called an advanced notice of proposed rulemaking, ask the public, and we are considering this before even making a proposal, we are considering those comments. Mr. Scott. Would you, could you characterize for us the general feeling within the industry itself? Where are there disagreements? Does the buy side agree with their counterparts on the selling side, for example? Mr. Gensler. No, I would say there is a wide variety of views. Some on what is called the buy side or asset managers currently have segregated accounts, and they want to continue to have that. In the clearing community, you are absolutely correct. They have been accustomed for decades, our agency has said for convenience you can comingle even though the statute said not to except for convenience. That started in the 1930s. Convenience in the 1930s was different than convenience in the 21st Century. So we are trying to sort that through. We may end up exactly as it is in the futures world. We may end up proposing some alternatives. We have been very well-informed. There is a range of views on that. Mr. Scott. Let us take the buy side. Are they of one mind? Is there disagreement internally within the buy side? Mr. Gensler. I would say that there are a variety of views even on the buy side. Mr. Scott. Have the clearinghouses weighed in with you on this issue yet? Mr. Gensler. Yes, and their comments are all on our Web site in a public file. Mr. Scott. Let me ask you one other question, Mr. Gensler. What would you say--would you say that the CFTC is effectively managing the resources that it has? Mr. Gensler. We are doing--I think the team at the CFTC is remarkable, and yes, we are not perfect. There are always some things that are going to go on and surprise you on any given day of the week. But it is a remarkably talented group of individuals who are trying to protect the public and ensure transparent markets. Mr. Scott. And in the budget the President just released, you and the SEC are two of the agencies that--two of the very few that have received a substantial increase in your budget. How do you characterize this increase? Is this efficient? Mr. Gensler. It is a good investment for the American public. We have been asked to take on a market that is about 7 times the market we currently oversee, and it is far more complicated. It has fewer transactions, but the swaps market means more to all these end users than most people even understand. So I think it is a good investment of taxpayer money. Mr. Scott. And then I would like to get on record your response to, if you could provide some insight very briefly on how the CFTC is adhering to Dodd-Frank requirements. Mr. Gensler. Dodd-Frank requirements said to consult with other agencies, to consult broadly with the public and international. That is what we were doing. We have had over 500 meetings. We put those on our Web site. We have had close to 4,000 comments that have come in, all on our Web site of course. And we are complying with the statute. We don't want to overread the law. We take the comments here very seriously and we don't want to underread the law obviously as well. Mr. Scott. Thank you, Mr. Gensler. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Garrett. [presiding] And I thank the gentleman. And just to let the panel know, and everyone else in the room know as well, we will have two more members questioning, Mr. Hurt and then Mr. Green, and then this panel will be dismissed. Mr. Hurt. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. And thank you all for being here. I just had really one question, but I was hoping that each of you could answer it. Considering that small banks are subject to the new clearing requirements unless the SEC and the CFTC use their authority to treat them as end users, I was wondering if you could comment on whether they should be included as end users in light of the high costs of compliance against the small percentage of swaps that they make up. But I was wondering if you could comment on whether they should be and whether they will be? Thank you. Mr. Gensler. Maybe I will address it first, because banks generally are in the interest rate space and currency space that the CFTC oversees. We put out a series of questions to get information from the public. We have been working closely with the Federal Reserve, the FDIC, and also the Farm Credit Administration and the National Credit Administration because those institutions are all involved. And so, we have not put a proposal out. These small banks, as some of the members have said, were not at the heart of the systemic crisis. But they are interconnected and so the freedom to fail of a large bank sometimes will be dependent upon if they would bring down the community banking system. You would want to let the large bank fail and not bring down the community banking system. So that is where the risk can propagate. But we are looking for the public comment to see if Congress has directed to consider this possible exemption. Ms. Schapiro. Small banks are not likely to be heavy users of part of the swaps markets. The SEC will regulate the security-based swaps. But we did propose as an alternative a small bank exemption. Mr. Hurt. But--just to be clear, it sounds like that is something the SEC has proposed but the CFTC is not inclined-- Mr. Gensler. No, in fact what we did was we-- Mr. Hurt. --to support? Mr. Gensler. I wouldn't want to leave you with that impression. It is really we are in the midst of a process of getting economic data and public comment on how to move forward. So we didn't make a formal proposal. We said, give us help on this from the public. We are doing the same with the Federal Reserve and all of the various regulators. Mr. Tarullo. Congressman, you perhaps won't be surprised to hear that our position before, during and after the legislation has been we do think that there is good reason for smaller bank exemption precisely because we want them to be able to do the business of banking. They are not swaps dealers, obviously. They would be regulated if they were. But of course, it is not committed to us by Congress to make that decision. We are just a commenter. Mr. Hurt. Thank you very much. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Garrett. Thank you. And the gentleman yields back? Mr. Green? Mr. Green. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I thank the ranking member and the chairman for allowing the time, and I will be sharing it with Mr. Perlmutter. I will move as expeditiously as possible. Let me ask you, Ms. Schapiro, is it true that if the projected budget cuts take place you will have to cut personnel? Ms. Schapiro. It is not exactly clear yet how we will balance the impact on personnel spending with the impact on our technology spending. We are a larger agency than the CFTC so we have a little bit more flexibility as between those two major buckets of our expenditures, and we haven't worked those issues out yet. Mr. Green. If you have to cut your technology, does this mean that you will not be able to upgrade your systems? Ms. Schapiro. I think it would be virtually devastating for the SEC to have to cut its technology budget. When I arrived 2 years ago, I discovered that we are many, many years behind our markets in our use of technology, sophistication of our technology, our capabilities with respect to technology. We have made a concerted effort over the last 2 years to try to improve that situation and putting the brakes on it is painful. Mr. Green. And I will quickly add this, currently you have about 3,000--3,800 employees, correct? Ms. Schapiro. That is right. Mr. Green. And you oversee approximately 35,000 entities? Ms. Schapiro. Yes, if you count public companies for whom we review the public disclosure, as well as 11,000 investment advisors and 5,000 broker-dealers and exchanges and electronic trading--electronic communication networks and transfer agents and clearing agencies, we get pretty close to that number. Mr. Green. And also those advisors that you mentioned. They manage about $33 trillion? Ms. Schapiro. Yes. Mr. Green. So you have a pretty big job. Ms. Schapiro. We do. We have about 12 examiners for every trillion dollars of assets under management compared to about 19 examiners just a few years ago. Mr. Green. And cutting you would--if you had to cut personnel, would it hurt your ability to police? Ms. Schapiro. I believe it would. That is not to say we can't continue to find, and we have a Tiger Team working on the efficiencies and savings because there undoubtedly are some. Mr. Green. And may I add-- Ms. Schapiro. Yes, I would agree. Mr. Green. --I admire you for being as delicate as you are because I understand that the integrity of the system hinges on your every word. So I appreciate the delicate fashion in which you have handled this. But I, on the other hand, don't have to be quite as delicate. And I would hope that we would not take the cops off the beat at the time that we need them greatly. We have seen what can happen when markets have a sharp downturn and when integrity is lost. So my hope is that we won't do this. Now, I have to yield to Mr. Perlmutter, the balance of my time. Ms. Schapiro. I agree with you though. Investor confidence is absolutely critical to our economy, and the cop on the beat is important to that equation. Mr. Green. Thank you. Mr. Garrett. We appreciate those remarks and we will move-- Mr. Perlmutter. Thank you. I thank the Chair. But I found another microphone, and I just want to follow up on what Mr. Green just had to say. First, let me just put something to bed, Mr. Gensler, please. On the end user derivatives, hedging for the future by somebody like Coors that wants to buy barley next summer, because they have a business that they have to conduct from year to year. That is not where you are not talking about putting margins on that, are you? Mr. Gensler. Absolutely correct. We are not talking about putting margins on them. And barley swaps would be allowed under a proposed agricultural swap proposal we put out. Mr. Perlmutter. But I mean just generally, end users hedging for products that they will need as part of their business are not part of the margin requirement that you are considering? Mr. Gensler. We have yet to propose that, but that is correct for non-financial end users. Mr. Perlmutter. Okay. Good. And let me just get back to the basics, though. The basics and what I am bothered about by particular questions of my Republican colleagues is that there seems to be a mass case of amnesia, that 2 years ago, 2\1/2\ years ago under the Bush Aministration, the stock market and every financial market crashed terribly, multiplied by derivatives, financial generally in nature. And my question to the entire panel is based on what happened when so many people lost their jobs, so many people lost their pensions, so many people lost wealth all across this country, do we need people in positions to regulate Wall Street and the financial transactions that take place there? And will the budgets that have been proposed by the Republicans cut into your ability to do that? Mr. Gensler. Yes, we need people. We are a good investment. We are only 680 people, to use arithmetic, that oversees the futures market. It is about $60 billion of futures per person. But swaps, we will have a half a trillion dollars of swaps per person. The budget as proposed-- Mr. Perlmutter. Half a trillion per person? Mr. Gensler. Per person. We think we need more people. And we need more technology. Mr. Perlmutter. I think we can end on that. I thank you. And I yield back to the chairman. Mr. Garrett. And I thank the gentleman for yielding back. And I thank the gentleman for reminding us of the Bush Administration, as well. Mr. Perlmutter. I didn't want you to feel left out. Mr. Garrett. Without this term. And I would like to thank all the members of the panel and also for all the staff that you bring with you to these meetings, as well. Ms. Waters. And Mr. Chairman, may I have a unanimous consent request? I would like to have unanimous consent to enter into the record a story from the New York Times that appeared last night which notes that some economists who were listed as advisors on the Business Roundtable study that I noted in my questioning, have requested that their names be removed from the study? Mr. Garrett. Without objection, it is so ordered. Ms. Waters. Thank you. Mr. Garrett. And again, I thank the panel. And the Chair also notes that some members may have additional questions for this panel, which they may wish to submit in writing. So without objection, the hearing record will remain open for 30 days for members to submit written questions to these witnesses and to place their responses in the record. And as soon as this panel makes their way out, we will be looking forward to our next panel. I thank the members of the panel for their patience, but more importantly, for their testimony that we are about to receive. So let me begin. And I will be brief, as we run through panel two. I think it is set up in the same order that I have here, from left to right, my left to right: Mr. Craig Reiners, director of commodity risk management, MillerCoors, on behalf of the Coalition of Derivative End Users; Mr. Donald F. Donahue, chairman and chief executive officer of the Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation, the DTCC; Mr. Terry Duffy, executive chairman, CME Group; Mr. Don Thompson, managing director and associate general counsel, JPMorgan Chase, on behalf of the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association, SIFMA; Mr. James Cawley, chief executive officer, Javelin, on behalf of the Swaps and Derivative Market Association, SDMA; and Mr. Chris Giancarlo, executive vice president, corporate development, GFI Group, Inc. And I thank the panel for being with us today. At this time, before I proceed, I will turn to Mr. Dold from Illinois for an introduction. Mr. Dold. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I just wanted to take this opportunity to introduce one of the panelists to my colleagues. Coming from the Chicagoland area, having worked in the Chicago Mercantile Exchange early on in college, I wanted to take this opportunity to introduce Chairman Duffy, who has been a CME member since 1981. He started out as somebody on the floor, at the bottom, and has worked his way up to be the top of the chain, the food chain, if you will, and he certainly represents a number of people. He was one of the chief architects in 2007 of the merger between the Chicago Board of Trade and the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, which is now the world's leading and most diverse derivatives marketplace. He also, at the request of President Bush, served on the National Saver Summit on retirement savings, and is a member of the Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board. He is widely recognized as a leader and expert in his field. He has testified numerous times before Congress; I don't know if that is a good thing or a bad thing. But we certainly appreciate your time today, as we do all the panelists. And so, we thank you very much and I just wanted to give a little background for my colleagues. Mr. Garrett. And I appreciate that. We will now turn to the panel. And I guess one of the most interesting aspects of the entire panel that was already referenced earlier today, and that is the price of beer, okay, going forward. Mr. Reiners, 5 minutes. STATEMENT OF CRAIG REINERS, DIRECTOR OF RISK MANAGEMENT, MILLERCOORS LLC, ON BEHALF OF THE COALITION FOR DERIVATIVES END-USERS Mr. Reiners. Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman, and members of the committee. My name is Craig Reiners. I am a beer guy from Milwaukee. My team manages the commodity price risk for MillerCoors. I am also testifying on behalf of the Coalition for Derivatives End Users. I am very pleased to have this opportunity to offer perspectives on rulemaking relating to the Dodd-Frank derivatives title. MillerCoors operates breweries in California, Ohio, North Carolina, Texas, Georgia, Virginia, Colorado, and Wisconsin, as well as the Leinenkugel's Craft Brewery and two microbreweries. Last year, we shipped 67 million barrels and sales reached $7.6 billion. Our 9,000 employees share a vision to create America's best beer company by driving profitable industry growth. MillerCoors insists on building its brands the right way through quality, responsible marketing, environmental stewardship, and community involvement. Rather than read verbatim from my submitted statement, allow me to highlight our key six messages. Number one, we fully support market transparency. Number two, as an end user, our use of derivatives is strictly used to manage price volatility intrinsic to physical commodities. Number three, our Board-approved commodity risk management policy strictly prohibits speculation. Number four, we support a broad end user exemption. Number five, we urge regulators to avoid creating unnecessary trading requirements with the unintended consequences of forcing companies to either retain more risk or seek alternatives offshore. And finally, number six, we urge caution relative to a compressed rulemaking timeline, which may not allow market participants the opportunity to provide valuable feedback. Now, to a bit more clarification. We support this committee's efforts to ensure derivatives markets operate efficiently and are well-regulated. We agree that proper regulation should reduce systemic risk and increase transparency in the over-the-counter markets. At the same time, the prudent risk of derivatives by end user companies such as MillerCoors does not generate risk or instability in the financial marketplace and played no role in the financial crisis. On the contrary, these risk management tools are critical to reducing commercial risk and volatility in our day-to-day businesses. Our commitment to our customers is to produce the best beer in the United States and deliver it at a competitive price. In order to achieve those goals, we must prudently manage our commodity risks. I believe the use of derivatives offers end users of physical commodities the risk management tools to provide a necessary degree of predictability to our earnings. Our single largest risk is aluminum. Our agricultural risks, of course, include malt and barley, corn and hops. Our energy risk portfolio includes coal, natural gas, deregulated electricity, and diesel fuel. As I mentioned before, our Board-approved commodity risk policy clearly forbids any and all speculation. The policy allows us to use over-the-counter swaps to precisely match the timing and prices of our complex manufacturing and distribution process. For example, we match our OTC swaps for aluminum with the actual use of cans over the same exact timeframe. This risk management technique allows us to manage costs, reduce price volatility, and manage cash flow within a reasonable parameter. In fact, we would create significantly more price volatility in our business by not hedging. We believe that end users generally share the concern that if the cost of hedging our risks rises significantly, entry into swaps may no longer be economical. The result would be a reduction in risk mitigation through hedging, which, ironically, could increase risk and exposure to market volatility. We believe that a broad end user exemption is critically important as the CFTC and SEC creates their final rules. During the regulatory process, we have sought to ensure that the exemption created by Congress would not be unduly narrowed. In particular, we have urged regulators to give thoughtful consideration to key definitions to ensure that end users like us are not saddled with bank-like regulation. I would like to address the prospect of margin being imposed on future, even previously entered contracts. This requirement would be particularly burdensome to end users like MillerCoors. Retroactive application of margin requirements would upset the reasonable expectations we had when we entered into our existing risk management contracts. We engaged in extensive negotiations with our financial counterparties to develop our ISDA agreements, which established our expectations for the future and included vigorous credit stipulations. Any retroactive application of margin requirements would be punitive. MillerCoors urges the financial regulators to avoid creating rigid and expensive trading requirements that unintentionally could cause companies either to retain more risk or seek risk management alternatives. By utilizing OTC swaps, we are able to customize our hedges to perfectly match the underlying exposure. The current rulemaking timeline is compressed, which may force regulators to prioritize speed over quality. We urge Congress to provide regulators with more time for rulemaking and for regulators to allow market participants sufficient time for implementation. I am confident in the way that these products are utilized by our company and other end users, actually benefits the economy by reducing volatility and increasing stability. On behalf of MillerCoors and the Coalition, I thank the committee for allowing me to appear today to discuss these important issues. And I am happy to answer any questions you may have. That concludes my testimony. [The prepared statement of Mr. Reiners can be found on page 309 of the appendix.] Mr. Garrett. And sir, thank you for your testimony. I believe you were all advised of this beforehand, but I will just reiterate, since some of you have testified before the committee before and others have not. And that is the clock in front of you has green, yellow, and red lights. The yellow light gives you the 1-minute warning so you can begin to sum up. Mr. Donahue? STATEMENT OF DONALD F. DONAHUE, CHAIRMAN AND CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER, THE DEPOSITORY TRUST & CLEARING CORPORATION (DTCC) Mr. Donahue. Chairman Garrett, members of the committee, I am here today representing the Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation a non-commercial industry utility that in 2010 settled roughly $1.7 quadrillion of U.S. securities transactions. Since 2006, we have operated the Trade Information Warehouse, a global swaps data repository currently covering about 98 percent of all credit derivatives transactions, some 2.3 million contracts, with a notional value of $29 trillion. I appreciate this opportunity to share our thoughts on the implementation of Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Act. In particular, I will focus on the swap data repository system for providing the necessary transparency into the global OTC derivatives markets. We share Congress' goal of ensuring more transparency in these markets to further global regulatory oversight and systemic risk mitigation. As many of the regulatory aspects of Dodd-Frank remain in development, transparency is a policy option that is most right for implementation. I make two fundamental points today. First, transparency is key to any attempt to mitigate systemic risk in the swap markets. All swaps, cleared and uncleared, must be reported to swap data repositories. To the extent derivatives contributed to the financial crisis, it was due to the lack of a unified view of which categories of market participants held wide exposures in the swap markets. The model needed to address this transparency concern has since been largely formalized for the credit default swap market in DTCC's Trade Information Warehouse. Leveraging the warehouse, late in 2008 we began providing standard position risk reports to appropriate authorities worldwide and publishing comprehensive market information free of charge. More recently, as we announced just this morning, we inaugurated an online portal through which global regulators, currently 19 worldwide, can securely and directly access detailed data from the warehouse's global data sets. Had this level of transparency about the CDS market existed in the run-up to the 2008 crisis, it would have mitigated a substantial amount of uncertainty that then contributed to market instability. DTCC believes that the most immediate and cost-effective approach to meeting Dodd-Frank's transparency goals will rely on proven repository infrastructure that currently provides regulators and the public this type of comprehensive market information. Providing transparency in the CDS market is a cooperative effort. I focused on the warehouse achievement to bring to the committee's attention why it has been successful. It would not have been possible without a substantial degree of global regulatory cooperation and support. But while this global supervisory push was a critical element, it was also important to the success that DTCC is not a commercial entity. We have no motivation other than to provide a central place for reporting and regulatory access to the data for both market and risk surveillance purposes. This removes commercial concerns from what is and must remain a market utility-based regulatory and supervisory support function. The structure created works because all market participants and all clearers and trading platforms with any significant volume are cooperating. If this cooperation were to fail, the data published and made accessible to regulators would fragment leading inevitably to misleading reporting of exposures. What would follow would be an exceptionally expensive if not politically impossible task for regulators to rebuild complex data aggregation and reporting mechanisms that the industry and regulators themselves have already created in a single place at DTCC. Both of these results appear undesirable in the extreme. The challenge ahead is to bring similar transparency to other parts of the swap markets. I commend the work of both the SEC and the CFTC in their thorough and thoughtful approach to this very complex challenge. It is our sense as an industry-governed utility with both buy and sell side members on our governing bodies that market participants are poised to undertake the significant cooperative effort necessary to complete the transparency of these markets as contemplated by Dodd-Frank. I urge the committee in exercising its oversight function to focus on removing obstacles to this process and to continue to use proven infrastructure while avoiding injection of commercial considerations that could hinder the cooperative attitude that so far has made progress possible. Thank you, and I am available for any of your questions. [The prepared statement of Mr. Donahue can be found on page 81 of the appendix.] Mr. Garrett. Thank you. Mr. Duffy? STATEMENT OF TERRENCE A. DUFFY, EXECUTIVE CHAIRMAN, CME GROUP INC. Mr. Duffy. Thank you. Chairman Garrett and members of the committee, I want to thank you for the opportunity to testify on the regulatory implementation of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act. I also want to thank Congressman Dold for that kind introduction and of course his leadership, not only in Congress but back in his district. As the Congressman said, I am Terry Duffy, executive chairman of the CME Group, which includes our clearinghouse and our four exchanges: CME; CBOT; NYMEX; and COMEX. In 2000, Congress adopted the Commodity Futures Modernization Act which leveled the playing field with our foreign competitors and permitted us to recapture our position as the world's most innovative and successful regulated exchange and clearinghouse. As a result, we remain an engine of economic growth in Chicago, New York, and the Nation. In 2008, the financial crisis focused well-warranted attention on the lack of regulation of OTC financial markets. The Nation learned painful lessons regarding unregulated derivatives trading. But we also demonstrated that regulated futures markets and futures clearinghouses operated flawlessly before, during, and after the crisis. Futures customers were protected. Congress responded to the financial crisis by adopting the Dodd-Frank Act to reduce systemic risk through central clearing and exchange trading of derivatives, to increase data transparency and price discovery, and to prevent fraud and market manipulation. We support these goals but our concern is that the CFTC's regulation of futures exchanges and clearinghouses will impose unwarranted cost and stifle innovation. We are not alone. Several Commissioners have cautioned against regulations that unnecessarily expand the Commission's workforce. While we are proponents of an adequate budget for our regulator, we object to the expansion of the Commission and its budget to enforce regulations that are uncalled for by Dodd-Frank or that take over responsibilities from SROs. We object to regulations that are not cost-benefit justified. Much of the problem results from the CFTC's efforts to expand its authority by changing its role from an oversight agency, whose purpose has been to assure compliance with sound principles, to a front-line decision-maker that imposes its business judgments on every operational aspect of derivatives trading and clearing. This role reversal will require a doubling of the Commission staff and budget. It will also impose astronomical cost on the industry and the end users of derivatives. There is no evidence that any of this is necessary or even likely to be useful. Dodd-Frank was not an invitation to pile regulatory burdens on regulated exchanges and clearinghouses. For example, Congress preserved and expanded a principles- based regulatory approach by expanding the list of core principles and granting self-regulatory organizations reasonable discretion in establishing the manner in which a self-regulatory organization complies with the core principles. The Commission asked for and Congress gave it power to adopt rules respecting core principles but Congress did not direct the agency to put an end to a principle-based regime. Yet, the Commission immediately and for no apparent reason proposed comprehensive regulations to convert most of the key core principles into prescriptive rules-based regulatory system. This is the ultimate solution in search of a problem. The crisis of 2008 did not arise from a failure of the regulated transparent futures markets. And the scope of Dodd-Frank is narrower than many of the CFTC rules proposed would suggest. Implementation would be similarly tailored. My written testimony includes numerous additional examples of misdirected or improper rulemaking. We welcome the outreach Chairman Gensler has recently demonstrated in seeking public input on Dodd-Frank implementation. This is a step in the right direction but more needs to be done. The Congress can mitigate some of the problems that have plagued the CFTC rulemaking process. They can do this by expanding Dodd-Frank's effective date and the rulemaking schedule so that professionals including exchanges, clearinghouses, dealers, market makers, and end users can have their views heard. This would give the CFTC a realistic opportunity to assess those views and measure the real cost imposed by these new regulations. Otherwise, the unintended adverse consequences of those ambiguities and the rush to regulation will stifle effective exchange innovation. We are concerned that overly prescriptive regulations, which are inconsistent with the sound industry practices, will make it more difficult to reach Dodd-Frank's goal of increasing transparency and limiting risk. I thank the committee for its time this morning. [The prepared statement of Mr. Duffy can be found on page 257 of the appendix.] Mr. Garrett. Thank you for your testimony. Mr. Thompson? STATEMENT OF DON THOMPSON, MANAGING DIRECTOR AND ASSOCIATE GENERAL COUNSEL, JPMORGAN CHASE & CO., ON BEHALF OF THE SECURITIES INDUSTRY AND FINANCIAL MARKETS ASSOCIATION (SIFMA) Mr. Thompson. Chairman Garrett and members of the committee, my name is Don Thompson. I am the senior derivatives lawyer at JPMorgan, and I am here today on behalf of SIFMA. Thank you for inviting me to testify. As this committee is well aware, American companies use over-the-counter derivatives to manage a wide variety of risks that they encounter in their day-to-day business, such as interest rate risk, foreign exchange risk, and commodity price risk. We act as a financial intermediary to help clients manage these risks in a flexible manner. Many clients choose to manage risk from the over-the- counter market and as the committee has heard in testimony from American companies, the use of over-the-counter derivatives has a significant impact on their ability to compete internationally. While over-the-counter derivatives have many benefits, it is also the case that there have been problems with their use and with their oversight. We support many of the provisions in Title VII including mandatory registration of regulation of swap dealers, mandatory clearing of standardized contracts between financial firms, and greater pre and post-trade transparency. It is worth keeping in mind that these and other reforms taken together will fundamentally alter the market structure of the over-the-counter derivatives market, which will impact liquidity and efficiency in these markets. Given these wholesale changes, it is critical that the regulations implementing them be done thoughtfully to ensure that American companies continue to have access to these products. We are increasingly concerned, however, that the accelerated pace of rulemaking, risks, unintended consequences that will put American end users at a competitive disadvantage. We are also concerned that the statutory deadlines may be too aggressive, limiting regulatory flexibility to craft appropriate rules. For example, for real-time reporting in block trade levels, gathering data from market participants is a necessary prerequisite to setting effective standards and such data should inform these rulemakings. In the rush to meet statutory deadlines, there has been insufficient focus on the statutory mandate to examine the effects of proposals on market liquidity. Without care, there is a real risk that the current proposals will drive liquidity out of U.S. markets and increase the cost of or even the ability to manage risk. We believe the agencies need to carefully implement the statute to preserve liquidity, enable American companies to continue to manage their risks in an increasingly volatile and competitive global marketplace. Despite transatlantic dialogue over derivatives regulation, we are also concerned about the competitive harm resulting from differences in final regulations between the United States and Europe. This concern extends to the gap in implementation dates in Europe and other jurisdictions, as well as confusion over the extraterritorial application of Title VII's provision. This problem can be addressed by a simple clarification of the intended extraterritorial reach of the Act, by harmonizing the implementation timetables between the United States and the E.U., or by both. In addition, certain proposed regulations treat very similar products differently in a way that will create duplicative reporting and compliance regimes that will be burdensome and will reduce the transparency benefits of information ultimately reported to the public under those regimes. I would like to conclude by saying that JPMorgan is committed to working with Congress, regulators, and industry participants to ensure that Title VII is implemented appropriately and effectively. I appreciate the opportunity to testify before the committee. I look forward to answering any questions you may have. [The prepared statement of Mr. Thompson can be found on page 330 of the appendix. ] Mr. Garrett. I thank you, sir. Mr. Cawley, please, for 5 minutes. STATEMENT OF JAMES CAWLEY, CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER, JAVELIN CAPITAL MARKETS, ON BEHALF OF THE SWAPS AND DERIVATIVES MARKET ASSOCIATION (SDMA) Mr. Cawley. Thank you. Congressman Garrett and members of the committee, my name is James Cawley. I am CEO of Javelin Capital Markets, an electronic execution venue of OTC derivatives that expects to register as a SEF or swap execution facility under Dodd-Frank. Thank you for inviting me here today to testify. I am here to represent the interests of the Swaps and Derivatives Market Association, which is comprised of multiple independent derivatives dealers and clearing brokers, some of whom are the largest in the world. When called to testify today, I was reminded of the main reason for which we are here, to fix the derivatives market such that we never again have to call upon the U.S. taxpayer to bail out Wall Street. The bilateral counterparty risk baked into every credit derivatives and interest rate swap contract still constitutes an unacceptable systemic risk to the national financial payment system specifically and to the broader economy as a whole. Simply put, such bilateralism acted as an accelerant to the crisis much like gasoline does to a forest fire. To help ensure in the future that the government and more specifically the U.S. taxpayer doesn't have to bail out the next trading firm that fails, we must ensure that central clearing and, more importantly, transparent execution of OTC derivatives is a success. We must transition away from ``too- interconnected-to-fail'', where one firm fails and pulls three others down with it. Central clearing membership requirements should be objective, publicly disclosed, and permit fair and open access as Dodd-Frank requires. This is important because clearing members act as the gatekeepers to clearing. Without open access to clearing, you will not have universal clearing of options, increased transparency, and lessened systemic risk. Clearinghouses should seek to be inclusive, not exclusive, in their membership criteria. They should learn from their own experience in the list of derivatives space of futures and options. In those markets, central clearing has operated successfully since the days of post-Civil War Reconstruction nearly 150 years ago, long before spreadsheets and risk models. In those markets, counterparty risk is spread over 100 disparate and non-correlated clearing firms. It works well, and no customer has ever lost money due to a clearing member failure. To complement broad participation, clearinghouses should not have unreasonable capital requirements. Capital should be a function of the risk a member contributes to the system. Simply put, the more you or your customers trade, the more capital you contribute. The SDMA supports the CFTC's call for clearing broker capital requirements to be proportionate in scale relative to the risk introduced to the system. We support the CFTC's call that the clearing firms' minimum capital be closer to $50 million rather than the closer to the $5 billion or $1 billion threshold that certain clearinghouses have originally suggested. It is worth remembering that Lehman Brothers and Bear Stearns would have met the $1 billion threshold until the days of their failure. Certain clearinghouse operational requirements for membership that have no bearing on capital or capability should be seen for what they are, transparent attempts to limit competition. Specifically, clearing members should not be required to operate swap dealer desks just so they can meet their obligation in the default management process. These requirements can easily be met contractually through agreements with third party firms or dealers. Clearinghouse governance should be balanced and transparent. Such governance bodies should represent the interests of the market as a whole and not the interest of the few. With regard to conflicts of interest with a clearing member, Dodd-Frank is clear. Dealer desks should not be allowed to influence their clearing member colleagues and strict Chinese law should exist. With regard to trading derivatives, clearinghouses must accept trades on an execution blind basis. Customers should be allowed to trade with whom they want. They should not be forced to execute trades in such a way where one side of that trade is done with an incumbent dealer. They should also be able to trade with dealers who do not self-clear but make markets nonetheless and provide the liquidity so vital to the integrity of the system. For their part, swap execution facilities should also offer open access. They should offer pre and post-trade transparency in an otherwise opaque marketplace. SEFs should seek to report their trades within seconds, as is the case in other markets. It is well-established with the introduction of greater transparency, more market makers and increased competition, a safer playing field will emerge to directly enhance liquidity and market integrity which in turn lowers the systemic risk. In conclusion, the CFTC and the SEC should be commended for their excellent work. Both agencies have been transparent and accessible throughout the entire process. They have adapted to industry suggestion when appropriate, and Congress should provide them funding that they need. We must move away from ``too-into-connected-to-fail.'' We must work together to ensure that when the next investment house fails, and they do, that we are properly prepared for it. I thank you for your time. [The prepared statement of Mr. Cawley can be found on page 77 of the appendix.] Mr. Garrett. And I found that illuminating. Thank you very much for the testimony and from the gentleman from the great State of New Jersey and the 5th District as well. Mr. Giancarlo please? STATEMENT OF J. CHRISTOPHER GIANCARLO, EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT, CORPORATE DEVELOPMENT, GFI GROUP INC. Mr. Giancarlo. Thank you, Congressman, and thank you members of the committee. I am Chris Giancarlo, executive vice president of GFI Group, an American company and a global wholesale broker of swaps and other financial products. I am also a Board member and former chairman of the Wholesale Markets Brokers' Association. As such, I speak from the perspective of the wholesale brokerage industry that handles over 90 percent of intermediated over-the-counter swaps trading in the United States and around the world today. Wholesale brokers are the prototype of competing swap execution facilities or SEFs. The core impact of Title VII of Dodd-Frank is to replace a market in which swaps are often traded directly between counterparties with a system for most transactions where a central clearing facility acts as a single counterparty to each market participant and where transactions are executed on regulated trading facilities including the newly created definition of SEFs. The goal of these two initiatives, clearing and intermediation, is better safety and soundness for U.S. swaps markets. Dodd-Frank promotes a market structure where competing SEFs and exchanges vie with each other to provide better services at lower cost in order to win the execution business of market participants. Dodd-Frank rejected the anti-competitive single silo exchange model for the futures industry where clearing and execution are intertwined. Dodd-Frank expressly permits swaps to be executed by SEFs using ``any means of interstate commerce.'' Congress left it to the marketplace to determine the best modes of execution and thereby foster technological innovation and development. Congress specifically did not choose to impose a federally-mandated one-size-fits-all transaction methodology on the swaps market. Liquidity in today's swaps markets is fundamentally different than in futures and equities markets and naturally determines the optimal mode of market transparency and trade execution. Wholesale brokers are experts in fostering liquidity and transparency by utilizing trade execution methods that feature a hybrid blend of knowledgeable brokers and sophisticated electronic technology that are specifically tailored to the unique liquidity characteristics of particular swaps market. There are three critical elements that regulators need to get right. First, SEFs must not be restricted from deploying the many varied trade execution methods successfully used today. It would be detrimental to market liquidity to mandate restrictive transaction methodologies or to experiment with rules taken from the highly commoditized equities or futures markets. Moreover, U.S. regulations need to be in harmony with those of foreign jurisdictions to avoid driving liquidity toward overseas markets that may offer greater flexibility in modes of trade execution. Second, the goal of pre-trade transparency can be realized through means that are already developed by wholesale brokers to garner and disseminate pricing information and not by artificial mechanisms that may restrict market liquidity for end users and other traders. Third, regulators need to carefully structure a public trade reporting system that takes into account the unique challenges of swaps trading. The objective must be to strike a balance between price transparency and market liquidity. If the rules do not properly define the size of block trades, information, and time delays, they will surely cause a negative impact to liquidity, disturbing end users' ability to hedge commercial risk and to plan for their future. The Wholesale Markets Brokers' Association has proposed a block trade standards advisory board of recognized experts from data repositories and SEFs to make recommendations to the regulators for appropriate blocks trade rules. The regulators and their staff deserve to be commended. They are working very hard to get this right. It is crucial that they gain a thorough understanding of the many modes of swaps trade execution and price dissemination deployed by wholesale brokers and accommodate those methods in trading practices in their SEF rules. It is only with such understanding that they can draft regulations that are properly tailored and effective. I am optimistic that given enough time and resources, regulators will craft SEF rules that are well-suited to the existing trading methods in the swaps market resulting in shorter and more effective implementation periods. As the adage goes, ``measure twice, cut once.'' We certainly don't want to have to cut this thing twice. Congress can assist with needed technical corrections to Dodd-Frank and crucially, by providing regulators with adequate time and resources to thoroughly understand the challenges and solutions to garnering trading liquidity in the swaps markets. Taking adequate time to get the regulations right will expedite the implementation of the worthy goals of Dodd-Frank, that is, central counterparty clearing and effective trade execution and provide end users and other traders with more competitive pricing, increased transparency, and deeper trading liquidity for their risk management needs. I thank you and I look forward to your questions. [The prepared statement of Mr. Giancarlo can be found on page 288 of the appendix.] Mr. Garrett. Thank you. And I thank the entire panel. We will now turn to the gentleman from New York, Mr. Grimm. Mr. Grimm. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and thank you to the panel. Mr. Giancarlo, since you just finished, I will start with you if I may? I wanted you to expand a little bit about the multiple modes of execution. I for one think it is important: voice, hybrid, electronic. These modes, if you can expand why it is so important to have multiple modes rather than wholly electronic platform, I would ask you that question. Mr. Giancarlo. Thank you, Congressman. Liquidity in the swaps market is very different than in the futures and equities markets, the nature of liquidity. Just to give you an example, 80 percent of the reference entities, swaps on 80 percent of the reference entities in the credit derivatives market, trade less than 5 times a day. It is not the same type of marketplace where you have a continuous tape that you do in a futures market or an equities market, and therefore the means by which experienced intermediaries bring parties together in this marketplace are very different. At GFI Group, and at our competing wholesale brokerage firms, we use a range of methodologies. Everything from online auction systems to fixing and matching session as well as fully electronic online platforms. But we also use a mix of humans and electronic systems. And often, that is very effective at bringing parties together. Mr. Grimm. That begs the question, if I may, it appears to me that the CFTC has relied heavily upon the regulations governing the futures contract in drafting the proposed rules for the swaps. Are the regulations for the futures industry appropriate for the swaps industry, and if not, why? Mr. Giancarlo. There may be some elements of what is--how regulations work in the futures industry that are appropriate but many, many other ways they are inappropriate. And in the proposed regulations, there are a number of areas where the proposed regs simply just don't apply, just simple things like referring to products listed on SEFs or members of SEF. These are concepts that really don't exist in the swaps market. And yet as we read the proposed rulemaking, these concepts still come through, and are inappropriate for what takes place in the swaps market. Mr. Grimm. Thank you very much. I appreciate that. If I can switch over to Mr. Donahue. Your testimony expressed concerns about fragmentation of data. Doesn't the technology exist already for the regulators to easily consolidate the data it receives from various swap data repositories? Mr. Donahue. Congressman, I would certainly agree it exists. I don't think I would use the word ``easily.'' You can consolidate the data. I think our point is the data is already consolidated. The data has been unified in a swap data repository. Having that consolidated view and having the infrastructure that we have to permit regulators in the market access to that consolidated view is very, very key to meeting the transparency goals that the Act has and that Congress had in adopting the Act. Trying to--allowing that to fragment and allowing the data to split out into pieces that get distributed in different forms in different data vendors and then imposing the obligation to then reunify that and consolidate that is, we think, going to be a fairly difficult process, a complex process, an expensive process and certainly add very significant time to the market's ability to establish the transparency that Congress and the regulators want. Mr. Grimm. One more question, Mr. Donahue, other than the congressional mandate that trades be reported, explain why we need repositories please? Mr. Donahue. Again, the repository gives a consolidated view of all of the activity within a particular asset class so that you can see all of the exposures. You know who has what exposures. You can see information about contracts conducted globally. This is a global market. Mr. Grimm. Could I just ask you, why can't the clearinghouses collect the information since they are the central nexus for the derivatives and let them send the information to the SEC and the CFTC? Mr. Donahue. Your question answers that, okay? The clearinghouses necessarily will fragment the data and you are going to be dealing with different groups of data reflecting different activities, different contracts. You may see offsetting contracts in different clearinghouses. You have to bring it together in some place. You have to aggregate it to see the entire view. That is precisely what swap data repositories do. Going there and using that infrastructure from day one we believe is the appropriate public policy choice. Mr. Grimm. I yield back, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Hensarling. [presiding] The gentleman yields back his time. The Chair now recognizes the gentlelady from New York for 5 minutes. Mrs. Maloney. Thank you very much, and I thank all the panelists. On the central repository, in your statement you said that it should be a utility and could you expand on why you describe DTCC as--why can't we use it as a for-profit model? Why should it be a utility? If you could expand? Mr. Donahue. Congresswoman, I think the crucial point there is the very, very deep degree of market cooperation and collaboration that is needed to make a repository work. Mrs. Maloney. Yes. Mr. Donahue. DTCC is a market-governed utility. We are operated on a not-for-profit basis. We have a governing board or a governance committee that has all of the constituencies in the market involved in the governance. They view us as a neutral meeting place where they can have a particular market need addressed in a way that is responsive to their concerns and meets the needs of the broad range of market constituencies. That is what a utility or an industry cooperative does. That is very, very crucial to getting the level of cooperation and collaboration that is needed to achieve rapid implementation of the transparency mechanisms that the repository provides. So we think getting the kind of market cooperation both within the United States and also crucially from overseas is very much facilitated by having a market utility supporting that function. Mrs. Maloney. When you mentioned overseas, we are definitely in a global market, and DTCC just has activities here in America, correct? Mr. Donahue. No, we actually have offices both in Asia and in Europe and we actually have an implementation of our derivatives support capability in Europe as well as in the States. Mrs. Maloney. So that allows you see the entire picture? Is everything in DTCC internationally and locally? Mr. Donahue. With respect to credit default swaps the Trade Information Warehouse is a global infrastructure. It has trade feeds from 1,800 counterparties in 52 countries around the world. The reference entities referenced in the warehouse originate from 90 countries around the world. The regulator transparency mechanism that we announced this morning gives information to 19 regulators around the world and that number will grow. So it is very much a global infrastructure, and that is very key given the global nature of the marketplace. Mrs. Maloney. In your written testimony, you mentioned that it would be, and I am quoting from it, it would be ``an exceptionally expensive if not politically impossible task for regulators to rebuild complex reporting mechanisms.'' Yet there were several amendments in Dodd-Frank that would have done this earlier. Mr. Gensler from CFTC I believe was testifying that he thought he would build his own clearinghouse. Can you comment on that? Do you think other repositories are necessary in order to have all the information to see the exposure, see the risk, and prevent another catastrophe like we had in 2008? Mr. Donahue. Our view is very much that you need a consolidated view per swap asset class. All right? So for credit default swaps, the trade information provides that. You would need a consolidated view, a repository for interest rate swaps, as an example, for over-the-counter equity swaps. And consolidating all that information into a unified view, we believe, is very crucial to having the kind of transparency that the market needs. The CFTC could do that. The regulators could do that, consolidating information from a variety of sources. That is a fairly expensive proposition. It is a fairly time-consuming proposition. Mrs. Maloney. Would it offer more information than what DTCC now offers-- Mr. Donahue. It would-- Mrs. Maloney. --or would it be a duplication? Mr. Donahue. I think it would be fair to characterize it as a duplication. We are within weeks of having the Trade Information Warehouse in a form that is completely compliant with Dodd-Frank requirements in terms of the breadth of the data we maintain, the kinds of information, and the kinds of counterparties we have reflected. So I don't see that--pushing, that the regulator level would add anything other than additional expense replicating what already exists. Mrs. Maloney. In my opening comments, I talked about the flash-crash, and how we need to try do everything we can to prevent it, and I would like to ask the panelists, how do SEFs prevent events like May 6th, which has been called a flash- crash or the recent hacking into NASDAQ, which was very troubling to many of us? How can you minimize or prevent these type of intrusions or shocks or disruptions to our financial markets? Mr. Giancarlo. Congresswoman, if I may? Mrs. Maloney. Sure. Mr. Giancarlo. As I noted in my testimony, we and other wholesale brokers operate a hybrid model of execution which we call a melding of man and machine. It is a combination of human brokers and very sophisticated electronic trading technology. In that type of environment, the risks of the machines taking over, if you will, are minimized because the humans are sitting there side-by-side watching trading activity, and they are very experienced in the way markets work. It is almost as if you have a pilot in an airplane; if there is any turbulence, they could take it back off autopilot, take it back into manual control. One of the concerns we have with proposed regulations that would seek to impose a sort of an electronic model on a marketplace that right now operates on a hybrid model is that would exacerbate the risks of an electronic malfunction-- Mrs. Maloney. Okay. Mr. Giancarlo. --taking the market in a direction that is unintended. Mrs. Maloney. Yes, just tell me--Mr. Donahue, do you have a comment? Thank you. Mr. Hensarling. You can be brief, sir. Mr. Donahue. Certainly, and I think we--obviously with respect to the NASDAQ point you make, Congresswoman, we certainly have taken very serious note of what happened. Obviously, we don't really understand all the details. It is something that we are very focused on, and I would think most market participants are very focused on ensuring that their systems are safeguarded against some incident like that, so it is something that gets a lot of focus and a lot of attention. Mrs. Maloney. Thank you. Mr. Hensarling. The time of the gentlelady has expired. I wish to announce to the remaining members that votes are expected within the next few minutes. We will recognize Mr. Duffy on the Majority side, and Mr. Perlmutter on the Minority side. And then, we will have to adjourn the hearing. The Chair now recognizes the gentleman from Wisconsin for 5 minutes. Mr. Duffy of Wisconsin. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I, too, want to thank the group for coming in and answering our questions and giving your testimony. You all look nice and tight together, very nice. We looked like that earlier today. Specifically, Mr. Reiners, I would like to ask you a few questions. I am also from Wisconsin, the 7th District. We like our beer in Wisconsin, and cheap beer or inexpensive beer, I should say, not cheap. Also, our district is home to Leinenkugel's, which is a great employer in Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin, and they make great beer there. And so I think some questions that are relevant to the impact of the Dodd-Frank rules and the beer industry. If you look at the regulations that are about to come down--is it going to be more expensive for you to enter into derivatives contracts to hedge your risk? Mr. Reiners. We do, both vanilla over-the-counter trades. We do futures trades. We do customized trades as I mentioned in my testimony. So should there be a change in the margin requirements for end users that would change the complexion of our working capital. It would certainly have an impact across- the-board. Certainly, commodities are a component of our final price and how we manage that price. But it is not the only factor relative to pricing beer. I have to also speak on behalf of the Coalition that these margin requirements that were discussed off and on really could impact capital investment, could impact how your working capital is employed. Mr. Duffy of Wisconsin. And with the cost increases, potentially those would, obviously, be passed on to consumers? Mr. Reiners. If the marketplace--it would be up to the marketplace. Mr. Duffy of Wisconsin. Okay. And if they are passed on, obviously, the cost of our six packs would go up, is it fair to say? Mr. Reiners. It would certainly have an impact on the cost of it, yes. Mr. Duffy of Wisconsin. Okay. I knew that was coming. Mr. Cawley. Congressman? Excuse me, Congressman? If I could just go back because-- Mr. Duffy of Wisconsin. Oh, yes. I am sorry. Mr. Cawley. --there is one other cost you need to consider when you are considering the end user away from margin and the actual processing of a trade. You need to consider the execution costs as well, and sometimes that can go up and go down. So one thing I think will be interesting to look at is when a marketplace becomes more transparent, the execution costs actually go lower. There is estimated to be about $50 billion worth of execution costs, currently, in interest rate swaps in CDS today on an annual basis. And if you allow central limit order books and transparency into the marketplace where buyers and sellers can meet each other directly, those fees should tend to go down. We estimate that those fees could go down by as much as $30 billion to $40 billion. Mr. Duffy of Wisconsin. In regard to the issue of transparency, I think everyone here would agree that companies like AIG and all of their contracts we should have more transparency or could have stopped the crisis that I think AIG played a big part in. But is there a concern of, say MillerCoors is entering into contracts for aluminum, and we talked about the liquidity in the marketplace with aluminum contracts. If you are entering into a contract, and it is probably a big contract--does that have an impact on the market if you are forced to disclose the contract that you are entering into? Is there a cost component with the transparency of end users with an over-the-counter contract? Mr. Reiners. --in regards to transparency, Congressman, I think it is really all about the details and the careful implementation of any new rules. We would, as a beer guy and someone who actually uses these tools that we are talking about, the level of confidentiality is certainly critical. You have kind of touched on that, and I think the rules would allow for that, but I think the issue of additional costs, the devil is in the details again. We don't want to add additional cost to the regulatory system because that does translate right in to our cost of goods sold. Mr. Duffy of Wisconsin. Okay. And just if I could ask the panel one other question? If you look at what we are doing here with our rules, it appears that we are leading the way with reforming our rules and regulation in regard to derivatives as opposed to the E.U. and other Asian markets. If this raises the cost of our contracts--is it possible or feasible that we are going to see more of our derivatives markets go to places like Singapore and Hong Kong or others? Mr. Thompson. We are already hearing from clients, especially European clients who deal with multiple banks including our London branch--things like it is not clear to me whether we will be caught up in Dodd-Frank, but if we deal with Barclays or Credit Suisse or a European bank, we won't be subject to this. Why should we take the risk of dealing with you and having to clear our contracts? Mr. Duffy of Wisconsin. So it is-- Mr. Hensarling. The time of the gentleman has expired. Mr. Duffy of Wisconsin. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Garrett. [presiding] They have just called votes on the Floor. We should have time to clear the two remaining members' questions. The gentleman from Colorado is recognized for 5 minutes. Mr. Perlmutter. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and I just appreciate the panel being here today waiting through all the questioning of the three previous witnesses. And I know that I have had a chance in the first round of Dodd-Frank to talk to at least the first four of you or your companies, and learned a lot in that process. Derivatives are something that I never expected to have to deal with on an ongoing basis as we seem to be dealing with it, but a couple of points. I will start with you, Mr. Reiners. We tried in that bill to limit margins or capital requirements for end users in connection with their having to deal with future risk, you guys buying barley on a forward basis or aluminum or whatever it might be. Listening to Chairman Gensler, I am comfortable that he got that as part of the bill. I appreciate your company's caution that some regulator doesn't get out of hand. And I think you brought it clearly to my attention, and I will keep an eye on it. Do you have indications in a rule that they are going to call and require margin against barley for next year? Mr. Reiners. No, Congressman. Thanks for the comment. I heard the same thing from the Honorable Chairman Gensler, and I had a prior personal discussion with him on this several months ago, and I heard the same thing here during his testimony. I have to say though that I think I heard some inconsistencies by some other participants today that give me pause. Mr. Perlmutter. All right. I appreciate that, and we will keep an eye out and look to you guys, just something like that to advising us, so we can be a good oversight committee. The other thing that I am hearing though from several folks is that we have to take time in devising and implementing the rules, and I don't think there is any question about it. But what is your understanding, Mr. Thompson, as to what the timing is of the rules from either the SEC or the CFTC? When are they going to be promulgated? Mr. Thompson. My understanding of the timing, first, with respect to the CFTC is they have already put out a draft of many of the 30 rulemaking work streams that they are charged with promulgating rules on there. And my understanding of Mr. Gensler's timetable, based upon his public statements, is that he intends to have most, if not all of them, in place by the July 17, 2011, Dodd-Frank Title VII effectiveness date. Mr. Perlmutter. Do you think that date is not a doable date,? Is it premature? Is that your concern? Mr. Thompson. I think sticking to that date runs the risk of serious unintended consequences, in large part, because many of these issues are complex. One thing the chairman notes is that he has gotten a tremendous amount of input from the market. I check the CFTC Web site every day for the comments that come in, and I don't see how they are keeping up with the information that is coming back in to them. Mr. Perlmutter. Let me stop you right there because we want to do this right, but there has to be some point where you get them done. I mean you can always analyze these to the nth degree. I would ask that both your company, JPMorgan, which is a big player, obviously, and SIFMA, which is a major association, speak on behalf of these agencies, the CFTC and the SEC to the degree they may need people to get stuff done. And I don't know how you want to react to that, if you want to react to that or Mr. Duffy, I know CME has been involved in this. Mr. Thompson. I will just react by saying both JPMorgan and SIFMA have actively provided the comment letters to the agencies on a wide variety of issues where we feel that they need assistance, technical advice or market-based input. And again, my concern is that given the sheer volume of information coming in to them, I am concerned about their ability to-- Mr. Perlmutter. --get it done? Mr. Thompson. --take a step back, analyze that, think about it thoughtfully, and incorporate it into the final rulemaking. Mr. Perlmutter. Mr. Duffy? Mr. Duffy. I will just say really quickly and just add to what Mr. Thompson said, we have a huge internal legal team analyzing each and every one of these rules. We have huge external legal firms working on these rules. We can't keep up with it. We are kind of perplexed. How in the world can a couple of Commissioners with a few staffers and their lawyers actually understand what these rules mean and what the effects of them could be for this country 6 months or 6 years down the road? So we do think that the prudent thing would be to take some time and for people to understand these in more detail. Mr. Perlmutter. And make sure it is properly staffed. Mr. Thompson. As an order of magnitude in following up on Mr. Duffy's comments, Mr. Gensler was describing the size of his agency as roughly 400-and-some-odd people. At JPMorgan in New York, we have a team of about 350 people working on various phases of this. Mr. Perlmutter. Okay. Thank you. Mr. Thompson. It is a monumental undertaking. Mr. Perlmutter. Thank you very much, and I yield back. Mr. Garrett. Thank you, and before the gentleman leaves, actually, we have a little bit more time, so I am going to yield, split our time-- Mr. Hensarling. Sure. Mr. Garrett. --two-and-a-half minutes, Mrs. Biggert?. Mrs. Biggert. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I appreciate that. I have just a couple of quick questions that I would like to ask Mr. Duffy. The futures exchanges currently employ limits in most physically-delivered contracts to mitigate potential congestions and to help identify threats that might to manipulate the markets. It seems like there has been a proposal in the President's recent Executive Order which turns this over to the CFTC. Wouldn't it be better to learn to leave it back within the market rather than put another cost to the Federal Government? Mr. Duffy. I do agree it would be best to leave it with the exchanges. We have been doing it for a number of years, and we have done it quite successfully. We have never had a customer lose one penny due to a clearing member default, and that is a 156-year record that we are very proud of, Congresswoman. So I think we have done an excellent job of managing risks when it comes to these types of problems as it relates to the limits. We have limits on all of our deliverable products, so we already have the limits put in place today. When it comes to energy, we have hard limits coming in to the last 3 days. We have accountability levels 30 days out on our grain products. They all have government-mandated limits imposed on them today, so these are things that are already in place today. So I am kind of confused on why the regulator is trying to impose more restrictive limits on the regulated market when Congress told him to go figure out how to rein in the over-the- counter market. And once you do that, then make sure you don't disenfranchise the listed market. So we are very confused on the process the way it is unfolding-- Mrs. Biggert. Okay. Thank you. One more quick question, and that is with the European Union and foreign jurisdictions, if they adopt a less restrictive regime, and considering what we talked about, I asked Chairman Gensler earlier this morning that on the position limits, isn't that going to force companies to go abroad? Mr. Duffy. They already have. We talked earlier about business going abroad. Our natural gas contract at the New York Mercantile Exchange that we own, once Congress--or once the rhetoric came out that they are going to impose these very stringent limits, we saw a big shift of open interest from our nat gas contracts over to the London nat gas contract. So we definitely saw that. Last week or 2 weeks ago, I think it was Michel Barnier or one of the other European officials came out and said exactly-- I just met with him in August. I met with Chairman Gensler and they said that they are going to be in lockstep with the United States and our regulations. This was back in August. I asked him when they passed Dodd-Frank in Europe. They don't have Dodd-Frank in Europe. Also, they just came out last week and said they are not going to impose hard position limits on energy products, but yet they have the ability to do so. This is exactly what this Congress told our regulator to do, but our regulator looks at it in a different light. Mrs. Biggert. Thank you. Mr. Duffy. Thank you. Mr. Giancarlo. Congresswoman, if I could just add on foreign competition? We are following very closely the directives coming out of MiFID and others coming out of Europe, and they don't also adopt the similarly restrictive approach to modes of execution for SEFs, that is--appear to be coming out of the CFTC. And we think that if Europe adopts a more flexible approach to intermediation by SEFs that business could also go overseas within that regard as well. Mr. Garrett. I thank the gentlelady, and we are really--I am sorry. I am pressed for time here, so I will just throw out a couple of things to Mr. Giancarlo, with regard to the SEFs, two quick things. One is a little bit in the weeds, and it is the difference in approach with regard to the SEC and the CFTC. The SEC seems to me a little bit more reasonable as far as it goes. The CFTC says no, you have to have five quotes. So if you go out to two car dealers and you get prices, now you have to go out to three more before we are allowing you to proceed. Can you just comment on that briefly? Mr. Giancarlo. Yes. Mr. Garrett. And two, one of my opening lines here was all that we are doing here is impacting upon jobs and job creation. Can you just talk with regards to SEFs--how does this--and how do we quantify any of this as well? Mr. Giancarlo. Sure, absolutely. The SEC has a long history of regulating over-the-counter markets, and as we see in their rulemaking, their approach to regulating the over-the-counter swaps market appears to adopt a great deal more flexibility in their approaches. The CFTC does take a more, shall I say, restrictive or proscriptive approach to the swaps market. It is actually dictating a whole series of methodologies that intermediaries need to adopt. In the RFQ area, you cited one, which is going out to five--having to receive five quotes, but we see that type of proscriptiveness running throughout a lot of the CFTC proposals, less proscriptive at SEC. And just on the issue of jobs, that is an important issue for us. Wholesale brokers such as ourselves employ thousands of Americans in jobs all over the country from places like Houston, Texas, to southern California, to right in our State, New Jersey, where we have operations in Englewood, New Jersey, and also in the New York City area where our industry probably employs close to 10,000 people. Their work is what we call the hybrid model where it is a combination of the human brokers and very, very sophisticated trading technology, technology that is licensed worldwide. But it is the combination of the person and the machine that gives these markets their particular nature. And what we are worried about is in the very proscriptive type of rulemaking that would require or force all of this in to an electronic-only-- Mr. Garrett. Right. Mr. Giancarlo. --methodology that it would have a severe impact on the hiring that we do. Mr. Garrett. I appreciate that, but I am just getting a buzz in my other ear that I have to be down on the Floor. We have to be on the Floor in less than 2 minutes, so I want to thank the panel for their answers. I would like to enter in to the record with unanimous consent, if I may, from the Wall Street Journal, an editorial dated February 11th, entitled, ``The Futures of America.'' And I would also like to say that the Chair notes that some members may have additional questions for this panel which they may wish to submit in writing. And so without objection, the hearing record will remain open for 30 days for members to submit questions to these witnesses and to place their responses in the record. And with that being said, this hearing is adjourned. And again, I thank the members of this panel. [Whereupon, at 1:45 p.m., the hearing was adjourned.] A P P E N D I X February 15, 2011 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T4554.001 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T4554.278 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T4554.279 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T4554.002 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T4554.003 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T4554.004 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T4554.005 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T4554.006 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T4554.007 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T4554.008 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T4554.009 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T4554.010 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T4554.011 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T4554.012 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T4554.013 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T4554.014 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T4554.015 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T4554.016 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T4554.017 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T4554.018 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T4554.019 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T4554.020 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T4554.021 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T4554.022 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T4554.023 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T4554.024 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