Source: https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2002/12/18/02-31837/government-securities-act-regulations-large-position-rules
Timestamp: 2018-06-21 08:59:11
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A Rule by the Treasury Department on 12/18/2002
This amendment is effective January 17, 2003.
77411-77416 (6 pages)
D. Proposed Rulemaking
II. Comments Received in Response to the Proposed Rulemaking
https://www.federalregister.gov/d/02-31837 https://www.federalregister.gov/d/02-31837
The Department of the Treasury (“Treasury,” “We,” or “Us”) is Start Printed Page 77412issuing in final form an amendment to the reporting requirements pertaining to very large positions in certain Treasury securities. The regulations are issued under the Government Securities Act Amendments of 1993 (“GSAA”). The purpose of the rules is to provide Treasury with information to better understand the causes of market shortages in certain Treasury securities. With the exception of one minor clarification, we are adopting the changes as proposed. We believe the changes made to the rules by this amendment will improve the information available to Treasury. Specifically, the amendment modifies the report to require separate reporting of certain components of the “net trading position” and the “gross financing position.” The amendment revises the current “memorandum” item to require that the par amount of securities delivered through repurchase agreements be separated by maturity classification. In addition, it adds a new memorandum item to the large position report to require that the gross par amount of “fails to deliver” be reported. Finally, the amendment also modifies the definition of “gross financing position” to eliminate the optional exclusion in the calculation of the amount of securities received through certain financing transactions.
You may download this final rule from the Bureau of the Public Debt's Web site at www.publicdebt.treas.gov. It is also available for public inspection and copying at the Treasury Department Library, Room 1428, Main Treasury Building, 1500 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20220. To visit the library, call (202) 622-0990 for an appointment.
Lori Santamorena (Executive Director), Lee Grandy (Associate Director), or Kevin Hawkins (Government Securities Specialist), Bureau of the Public Debt, Government Securities Regulations Staff, (202) 691-3632 or e-mail us at govsecreg@bpd.treas.gov.
We re-examined the “large position rules” [1] and on July 31, 2002, published proposed amendments to the rules that would improve the information available to Treasury to better understand the causes of market shortages in certain Treasury securities. [2] In this notice, we first provide background on the rules and why we are changing them. Next we discuss the public comments we received in response to the proposed rulemaking, and then we describe the final amendments. As explained below, we are adopting the proposed changes with one minor clarification.
In response to short squeezes in two-year Treasury notes that occurred in the government securities market in 1990-1991, Congress included in the GSAA [3] a provision granting Treasury new authority to prescribe rules requiring any person or entity holding, maintaining, or controlling large positions in to-be-issued or recently-issued Treasury securities to keep records and, when requested by Treasury, to file reports of such large positions. The provision was intended to improve the information available to Treasury, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York (as Treasury's agent), and the Securities and Exchange Commission (referred to as “regulators” in this document) regarding very large positions in Treasury securities held by market participants and to ensure that regulators have the tools necessary to understand unusual conditions in the Treasury securities market.
The rules provide for an “on-demand” reporting system rather than a regular, ongoing system of reporting.[4] Large position reports must be filed with the Federal Reserve Bank of New York (“FRBNY”) in response to a notice from us requesting large position information on a specific issue of a Treasury security by entities with positions that equal or exceed the reporting threshold specified in the notice (currently not less than $2 billion). The notice is in the form of a press release we issue and subsequently publish in the Federal Register. We also provide the press release to major news and financial publications and wire services for dissemination. An electronic mailing list for notification of calls for large position reports that was implemented in 1998 is also available at Public Debt's website at the address provided earlier in this rule. This provides market participants with information about calls for large position reports in the most timely and efficient manner. The reports must be received by the FRBNY before noon Eastern time on the fourth business day after the issuance of the Treasury press release calling for large position information.
A “reportable position” is the sum of the net trading position, the gross financing position and the net fails position in a specified issue of a Treasury security collectively controlled by a reporting entity.[5] All positions are required to be reported at par value on a trade date basis.
The recordkeeping requirements provide that any person or entity controlling at least a $2 billion position in a specific Treasury security must maintain and preserve certain records that enable the entity to compile, aggregate and report large position information.[6]
Treasury's large position recordkeeping and reporting rules apply to all persons and entities, foreign and domestic, that control a reportable position in a Treasury security, such as: government securities brokers and dealers; registered investment companies; registered investment advisers; custodians, including depository institutions, that exercise investment discretion; hedge funds; pension funds; insurance companies; and foreign affiliates of U.S. entities.[7] The broad application of the rule to include both foreign and domestic entities is consistent with the statutory purpose of the GSAA.[8]
We reiterate that large positions are not inherently harmful, and that there is no presumption of manipulative or illegal intent on the part of the controlling entity merely because its position is large enough to be subject to Treasury's rules.
Since the rules became effective in 1997, we have conducted annual calls for reports to test the accuracy and reliability of large position reporting systems. These tests have given us Start Printed Page 77413valuable experience and insight as we consider how to improve the information provided to regulators. This experience, in addition to our ongoing need to take into account the liquidity and efficiency of the Treasury securities market, caused us to re-examine the rules and issue a proposed rulemaking on July 31, 2002.[9] The modifications that were proposed reflected our continuing need for the ability to obtain useful information, while minimizing the costs and burdens on market participants.
The proposed rulemaking requested public comment on changes to the large position rules that would require:
Separate reporting of the par amount of each of the five components of the “net trading position;”
Separate reporting of the total par amount of securities received through reverse repurchase agreements by maturity classification in the “gross financing position” (i.e., either “overnight and open” or “term”);
Separate reporting in the current memorandum item of the total par amount of securities delivered through repurchase agreements by maturity classification (i.e., either “overnight and open” or “term”);
Reporting of the amount of “fails to deliver” in a new memorandum item; and
Elimination of the optional exclusion in the calculation of the “gross financing position” for the amount of securities received through certain financing transactions.[10]
We received one comment letter in response to the proposed rulemaking, from The Bond Market Association (TBMA).[11] Overall, TBMA was supportive of the proposed rule. The commenter noted that more detailed reporting of the net trading and gross financing positions would require many reporting entities to reconfigure their internal systems used to generate large position reports, thus increasing compliance costs. However, TBMA deemed the modifications appropriate because they should improve the depth of information available to Treasury and other regulators thereby enhancing transparency and enabling regulatory authorities to better understand the causes of market shortages of Treasury securities.”
TBMA suggested that we extend the current three and a half day reporting deadline to a full four business days. The commenter asserted that the broader reporting obligations could be “unduly burdensome” for entities that must consolidate information from global affiliates into a single report. The commenter also suggested that Treasury move the release time for the announcement of calls for large position reports to 8:00 a.m. (EST).
As noted above, TBMA was supportive of requiring more detailed reporting of the gross financing position. However, TBMA urged “Treasury to clarify in the final rule that the specific maturity date for a term repo transaction does not need to be reported.”
TBMA was fully supportive of eliminating the optional exclusion in the calculation of the gross financing position for certain transactions, including where the counterparty retains the right to substitute securities. The commenter stated that, “The proposed change would create a simpler and more unambiguous rule,” that would “reduce compliance costs” and “ensure consistent treatment of overnight reverse repurchase transactions and term repurchase transactions where the counterparty retains a technical right of substitution.”
After considering the one comment letter received, we are adopting the amendment essentially as proposed with a clarification recommended by the commenter. As recommended, we are clarifying in the rule amendment our intention that specific maturity dates for term repurchase agreements and term reverse repurchase agreements not be reported. That means that only the total dollar amount of the outstanding contracts for term repurchase agreements and term reverse repurchase agreements, respectively, are to be reported.
Accordingly, § 420.3(c)(1) and (c)(3), and Appendix B are revised to require that each of the five components in § 420.2(f)(1)-(5) that, together, comprise the “net trading position,” to be reported separately. As we stated in the proposed rulemaking, since entities already are collecting this information to calculate their total net trading position, we believe that the separation of these components should not prove to be very burdensome.
Section 420.3(c)(1) and (c)(3), and Appendix B are revised to require entities to separate the reverse repurchase agreement components by maturity classification (i.e., break out reverse repurchase agreements as either “overnight and open” or “term”) in the reporting of the gross financing position. Similarly, the current memorandum item is revised to require that the total gross par amounts of securities delivered through repurchase agreements be reported by maturity classification. As previously discussed, a clarification has been added that only the total dollar amount of term reverse repurchase agreements and term repurchase agreements, respectively, is to be reported. We believe the separate reporting of these individual components in the large position formula, as well as the separation of reverse repurchase agreements and repurchase agreements by maturity classification, will help us to better understand the reporting entity's degree of control and economic interest in the particular security.
Section 420.3(c)(2) and Appendix B are revised to add a second memorandum item to the large position information for the gross par amount of “fails to deliver.” This will help us to better understand a reporting entity's fails situation without increasing the burden on reporting entities since fails to deliver are already factored into the “net fails position” component.
Finally, the definition of “gross financing position” is revised at § 420.2(c) to eliminate in its entirety the optional exclusion for certain securities received through financing transactions. A conforming change is also made to item #2 “Gross Financing Position” in appendix B to part 420 (Sample Large Position Report) to reflect the elimination of the optional exclusion. This means that a reporting entity may no longer elect to reduce its gross financing position by the par amount of the securities received in transactions: in which the counterparty retains the right to substitute securities; that are subject to third party custodial relationships; or that are hold-in-custody agreements. We believe this change will enhance the usefulness of the large position reports to regulators. We agree with the commenter that this change will result in a simpler and more unambiguous rule.
Regarding the commenter's request that Treasury extend the current three and one-half day reporting deadline to a full four days, and also that Treasury move the release time for the announcement of calls for large position reports to 8 a.m. EST, we have decided Start Printed Page 77414not to change the current rule. We have given consideration to this comment and are sympathetic to market participants' concerns regarding the time needed for some reporting entities to coordinate with overseas affiliates, aggregate position totals and file a single consolidated large position report. However, to be balanced against these concerns is the need for reports to be filed quickly in order to accomplish the purpose of the rules. If unusual market conditions or a pricing anomaly exist, we believe three and one-half days is a significant amount of time for regulators to wait for the reports that will enable us to make better and more timely decisions to ensure the integrity, liquidity and efficiency of the Treasury market. Also, although we will attempt to release announcements of large position calls in the morning when possible, Treasury must retain the flexibility to announce a call at any time of the day due to market developments and our need to quickly obtain information on market shortages. Market participants with very large positions should be prepared for an announcement of a call for large position reports at any time.
We believe the notification of calls for large position reports e-mail list that has been available at Public Debt's Web site since 1998 has provided a valuable electronic service. Anyone signing up is promptly notified anytime Treasury announces a call for large position reports, with a link provided in the e-mail message to the actual Press Release announcing the call. We understand that market participants, including many affiliates, have found that this enhanced system for dissemination of call announcements has been very useful in providing them with the call information in a more timely and efficient manner.
To allow market participants sufficient time to make necessary preparations for compliance, we are providing for a 30-day delayed effective date from the date of publication in the Federal Register of the amendment to the rules.
The regulations are not a “significant regulatory action” pursuant to Executive Order 12866.
We certify under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601, et seq.) that these amendments, if adopted, would not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. We continue to believe that small entities will not control positions of $2 billion or greater in any particular Treasury security. The inapplicability of these amendments to small entities indicates there is no significant impact. As a result, a regulatory flexibility analysis is not required.
The collections of information contained in the final amendments have been reviewed and approved by the Office of Management and Budget pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.[12] Under the Act, an agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to respond to, a collection of information unless it displays a valid OMB control number.
The collection of information in the final amendments is contained in § 420.3. The rules at § 420.3 continue to require a reporting entity whose position equals or exceeds the announced large position threshold for a specific issue of a Treasury security to report the information to FRBNY. We believe few reporting entities would actually have to file reports because the minimum reporting threshold ($2 billion) remains high. Moreover, we expect that our requests for information will be infrequent. We plan to continue testing the reporting and recordkeeping systems of market participants by requesting large position reports at least annually. The threshold limit will be determined based on market conditions at the time of the call.
We do not believe that market participants would find the additional “fails to deliver” memorandum item burdensome since they already determine this figure when calculating their “net fails position” on line 3 of the existing large position report. The “fails to deliver” memorandum item is simply a place for reporting entities to record a previously derived number.
We also do not anticipate that the elimination of the voluntary optional exclusion within the “gross financing position” would be a significant inconvenience for market participants. It is unlikely that removing this exclusion from the large position calculation would increase the time burden that entities face when calculating their positions, although it may result in more entities filing large position reports.
We believe the separate reporting of the “net trading position” components would not be very burdensome for market participants since they must already collect this information to calculate their net trading position. We also believe market participants would not find it very burdensome to separate their reporting of reverse repurchase agreements and repurchase agreements by maturity classification. Since the changes taking effect require more detailed information to be provided by reporting entities that file reports in response to a call for reports by Treasury, we increased the annual reporting burden in our submission to OMB by 40 hours, representing an increase from four to eight hours per large position report submitter.
Comments on the accuracy of the estimate for this collection of information or suggestions to reduce the burden should be sent to the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, Office of Management and Budget, Attention: Desk Officer for Department of the Treasury, Washington, DC, 20503; and to the Government Securities Regulations Staff, Bureau of the Public Debt, 999 E Street, NW., Room 315, Washington, DC 20239-0001.
(c) “Gross financing position” is the sum of the gross par amounts of a security issue received from financing transactions, including reverse repurchase agreement transactions, bonds borrowed, and as collateral for financial derivatives and other securities transactions (e.g., margin loans). In calculating the gross financing position, a reporting entity may not net its positions against repurchase agreement transactions, securities loaned, or securities pledged as Start Printed Page 77415collateral for financial derivatives and other securities transactions.
Formula for Determining a Reportable Position
Security Being Reported $ XXXXXXXXXXXX
Date For Which Information is Being Reported $ XXXXXXXXXXXX
Cash/Immediate Net Settled Positions $ XXXXXXXXXXXX
Net When-Issued Positions for To-Be-Issued and Reopened Issues $ XXXXXXXXXXXX
Net Forward Settling Positions Including Next-Day Settling $ XXXXXXXXXXXX
Net Positions in Futures Contracts Requiring Delivery of the Specific Security $ XXXXXXXXXXXX
Net Holdings of STRIPS Principal Components of the Specific Security $ XXXXXXXXXXXX
Total Net Trading Position $ XXXXXXXXXXXX
Total of securities received through
Overnight and Open $ XXXXXXXXXXXX
Term $ XXXXXXXXXXXX
Bonds borrowed, and as collateral for financial derivatives and other financial transactions $ XXXXXXXXXXXX
Total Gross Financing position $ XXXXXXXXXXXX
3. Net Fails Position $ XXXXXXXXXXXX
4. Total Reportable Position = $ XXXXXXXXXXXX
Report the total gross par amounts of securities delivered through
Securities loaned, and as collateral for financial derivatives and other securities transactions $ XXXXXXXXXXXX
Total Memorandum 1 $ XXXXXXXXXXXX
Memorandum 2:
Report the gross par amount of fails to deliver. Included in the calculation of line item 3 (Net Fails Position) $ XXXXXXXXXXXX
1. The rules were issued on September 12, 1996 (61 FR 48338) and were effective on March 31, 1997. They established a new part 420 of the regulations issued by Treasury in 17 CFR, Chapter IV, Subchapter A, providing recordkeeping and reporting requirements related to very large positions in certain Treasury securities.
2. 67 FR 49630 (July 31, 2002).
3. Pub. L. No. 103-202, 107 Stat. 2344 (15 U.S.C. 78o-5(f))(1993).
5. 17 CFR 420.2(h).
6. 17 CFR 420.4
7. The rules provide a total exemption for foreign central banks, foreign governments and international monetary authorities (e.g., the World Bank) (collectively, foreign official organizations). Federal Reserve Banks are also exempt for the portion of any reportable position they control for their own account.
8. H.R. Rep. No. 103-255 (September 23, 1993).
10. Currently, § 420.2(c) provides that a reporting entity may elect to reduce its gross financing position by the par amount of the securities received in transactions: in which the counterparty retains the right to substitute securities; that are subject to third party custodial relationships; or that are hold-in-custody agreements.
11. The proposed rule, and the comment letter, dated September 16, 2002, are available for downloading on the Internet, and for inspection and copying at the Treasury Department Library at the address provided earlier in this final rule.
[FR Doc. 02-31837 Filed 12-17-02; 8:45 am]