Court Opinion

ID: 2824715
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-08-11 05:10:00.619664+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:34:07.129644
License: Public Domain

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

)
COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING )
COMMISSION, )
)
Plaintiff.“ )
)
v. ) Civil Action No. 12-1902 (RCL)
)
TRADE EXCHANGE NETWORK )
LIMITED and INTRADE )
THE PREDICTION MARKET )
LIMITED )
)
Defendants. )
____)
W
(Summary Judgment)

In this case, plaintiff, the United States Commodity Futures Trading Commission (“CF TC”
or “Commission”), alleges that Trade Exchange Network Limited (“TEN”), an Irish company, and
Intrade the Prediction Market Limited (“Intrade”), an Irish company, violated Section 4c(b) of the
Commodity Exchange Act (“CEA” or “the Act”), 7 U.S.C. § 6(c)(b) (2012), and Commodity
Futures Trading Commission Regulation (“Regulation”) 32.11, 17 CPR § 32.11 (2012) [Count
I]. CFTC also alleges that TEN violated CF TC’s 2005 Commission Order and Section 6c of the
Act, 7 U.S.C. § 13a-1 (2012) [Count II], as well as that TEN and Intrade violated Section 9(a)(3)
of the Act, 7 U.S.C. § 13(a)(3) (2006) [Count IH].

Before the Court are the CF TC’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment as to Counts I and
II of the Complaint, ECF No. 47, TEN and Intrade’s Memorandum in Opposition, ECF No. 51,
and the CF TC’s Reply, ECF No. 53. The Court will GRANT plaintiff” s motion for partial summary

judgment as to Counts I and II of the complaint.

I. BACKGROUND.

Defendants TEN and Intrade are both companies organized under the laws of Ireland with
principal places of business in Dublin, Ireland. Answer 1111 14—15, ECF No. 7. In 2005, the CFTC
entered an administrative order (“2005 Commission Order”) against TEN for violating Section
4c(b) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C. § 6c(b) (2002), and Regulation 32.11 of the CFTC’s Regulations, 17
C.F.R. § 32.11 (2004) by “soliciting and accepting orders from US. residents for commodity
options not otherwise excepted or exempted from the Commission’s ban on options.” Trade Exch.
Network, Comm. Fut. L. Rep. 11 30135 (Sept. 29, 2005) (“2005 Commission Order”), ECF No. 47-
3. TEN acknowledged service and consented to the entry of the 2005 Commission Order. 2005
Commission Order; Answer 1} 1. The 2005 Commission Order found that:

“TEN, through its websites, offers for trading to US. residents, as
well as residents of all other nations, commodity option contracts.
The contracts have a speciﬁc strike price and trade at values between
0 and 100. Traders buy and sell the contracts based on their belief as
to whether the contract will settle closer to 0 or 100. For example,
TEN offered a Gold Futures Year End 2005 contract that had a strike
price of $300. Traders bought the contract in anticipation that the
year end closing price of gold ﬁitures would reach $300, or they sold
the contract in anticipation that the strike price would not be
achieved. TEN’s websites offered other commodity option contracts
including Daily Crude Oil, Light Sweet Crude Oil Futures Year End,
Intraday Euro versus US. Dollar Rate, Us. Dollar versus Yen Cash
Rate, and Scheduled Federal Open Market Committee Rate
Announcements.”

(2005 Commission Order at 2.)

TEN, without admitting or denying the ﬁndings in the 2005 Commission Order, agreed
to refrain from violating Section 4c(b) of the Act, 7 U.S.C. § 6c(b) (2002) and Regulation 32.11,
17 CPR. § 32.11 (2004) in the ﬁiture, to pay a civil monetary penalty in the amount of $1 50,000,
and to perform additional requirements under the Commission Order, including informing TEN’s

U. S. customers that certain contracts are unavailable for them to trade on TEN’s trading websites

Defense Council, Inc., 467 US. 837, 1344 (1984) (“We have long recognized that considerable
weight should be accorded to an executive department’s construction of a statutory scheme it is
entrusted to administer, and the principle of deference to administrative interpretations”). The
CFTC has previously regulated binary options. In 2004, the Commission granted HedgeStreet
Inc’s (now known as NADEX) application to become a Designated Contract Market (“DCM”),
which allowed it to lawfully offer binary options on speciﬁc commodities to US. customers. Pl.’s
Reply at 9 (citing Div. of Mkt. Oversight, U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Comm’n, Designation
Memorandum: Application of HedgeStreet, Inc. for Designation as a Contract Market pursuant to
Section 5 and 6(a) of the Commodity Exchange Act (Feb. 10, 2004) at 29-30, available at
http://sirt.cftc.gov/SIRT/SIRT.aspx?Topic=TradingOrganizationsAD&Key=39). In granting
HedgeStreet, Inc. designation as a DCM, the Commission deﬁned “binary option” as a “cash-
settled option with a ﬁxed payout rather than a payout based on how deep the option is in the
money.” Id. at 2. Similarly to the contracts available for trading on www.intrade.com, the ﬁnancial
instruments offered by HedgeStreet, Inc. consist of a call option and a put option. Id. at 29. If
HedgeStreet, Inc. lists a contract on a certain index with the strike price of 100, “[a] put option on
this index would expire in the money if the underlying index value is less than or equal to 100,
while the call option on that same index would expire in the money if the underlying index value
is greater than 100.” Id. If the index level is above 100, the call option would be in the money and
pay a ﬁxed sum of$10. Id.

TEN and Intrade do not fall within any exceptions under the Act that would allow them to
lawfully offer commodity options for trading. Neither TEN nor Intrade fall into the any of the
following categories: Designated Contract Market (“DCM”) per Section 4(a) of the Act, 7 U.S.C.

§6(a) (2012); an exempt foreign board of trade (“FBOT”) or an exempt board of trade (“EBOT”)

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per Section 5d of the Act, 7 U.S.C. § 7a-3 (2012). TEN’s Resps. Req. Admis. No. 12—17; Intrade’s

Resps. Req. Admis. No. 12-14, 16-17.

2. The Financial Instruments Available for Trading on www.intrade.com

Involved Commodities Regulated by the Act.

TEN and Intrade also argue that “Count I is based on a signiﬁcant number of contracts that
did not involve a ‘commodity’ regulated under the CEA.” Defs.’ Opp’n at 12. TEN and Intrade
argue that a large number of the contracts in question were based on questions about weather
events and economic statistics, not “goods or articles.” Id. at 13. Under the Act, the term
“commodity” includes the listed agricultural commodities (such as wheat, cotton and rice) and “all
other goods and articles, except onions . . . and motion picture box office receipts . . . , and all
services, rights and interests . . . in which contracts for ﬁlture delivery are presently or in the future
dealt in.” 7 U.S.C. § 1a(4) (2012). Under this deﬁnition, the 228 contracts in gold contracts, 48
contracts in crude oil contracts, 41 contracts in currencies and 1,831 contracts in gasoline are
commodity options under the Act. Harris Dec]. 11 10.

The span of the Act’s deﬁnition of “commodity” is further demonstrated by the deﬁnition
of “excluded commodity,” which includes currency, index or measure of inﬂation, “any other rate,

3’ (L

differential, index, or measure of economic or commercial risk, return or value, an occurrence,
extent of an occurrence, or contingency (other than a change in the price, rate, value, or level of a
commodity not described in clause (i)) that is beyond the control of the parties to the relevant
contract, agreement, or transaction; and associated with a ﬁnancial, commercial, or economic
consequence.” 7 U.S.C. § 1a(19) (2012). These commodities were excluded only under Sections

2(d) and 2(g) of the Act. 7 U.S.C. §§ 2(d), 2(g) (2006). Sections 2(d) and 2(g) applied only to

agreements between parties that are “eligible contract participants” (ECPs) that were not “executed

12

or traded on a trading facility” or “subject to individual negotiation by the parties.” Id. During the
relevant period, the US. customers that traded binary options were not eligible contract
participants, since they each had individual net worth of less than $5 million. See Rosa Decl. 11 l,
ECF No. 47-25; Beyer Decl. 11 7; Wu Decl. 11 7; 7 U.S.C. § 1a (2012) (deﬁning an “eligible contract
participant” as “an individual who has amounts invested on a discretionary basis, the aggregate of
which is in excess of (I) $10,000,000 or (11) $5,000,000 and who enters into the agreement,
contract, or transaction in order to manage the risk associated with an asset owned or liability
incurred, or reasonably likely to be owned or incurred, by the individual”). Furthermore, the
contracts were traded on the intradeeom website, and thus were not “subject to individual
negotiation by the parties.” Therefore, the “excluded commodity” category does not apply to the
contracts in question, and instead serves as ﬁirther proof of the scope of the deﬁnition of
commodity under the CEA. As a result, the 911 climate and weather contracts (including 420
contracts concerning the hurricane season and 491 contracts about New York City snowfall) and
2,444 contracts regarding US. economic numbers are commodity options under the Act, Harris
Decl. 1] 10.
B. Count 11: T EN’s Violations of Section 6c of the Act, 7 U.S.C. § 13a-1 (2012)

TEN violated Section 6c of the Act, 7 U.S.C. § 13a-1 (2012), which allows the CFTC to
seek injunctions for “engaging . . . in any act or practice constituting a violation of any provision
of this chapter or any rule, regulation, or order thereunder.” 7 U.S.C. § 13a—1 (2012) (emphasis
added)

TEN argues that a factual dispute exists regarding whether TEN had customers during the
relevant period. Defs.’ Opp’n at 14. TEN argues that it did not have customers because on or about

February 28, 2007, TEN deconsolidated into three separate entities in order to “separate TEN’s

l3

non-sports prediction markets from its sports markets” and TEN “transferred its non-sports
prediction markets and technology-related intellectual property to Intrade.” TEN’s 3d Supp. Resp.
Interrog. No. 6. As a result of the reorganization, “Intrade obtained ownership of or usage rights
to the www.intrade.com domain, TEN’s customer lists and historical market data, all open
nonsports positions on TEN’s trading platform, and orders and member ﬁands sufﬁcient to cover
the same.” Id In addition, TEN did not earn any revenue from trading; all revenue earned from
trading during the relevant period was reported on Intrade’s tax returns. Id TEN argues that the
companies did not operate as a single business because they had separate corporate registration
numbers under Irish law, maintained separate bank accounts and ﬁled separate tax returns and
ﬁnancial accounts. Defs.’ Opp’n at 15.

In determining whether several business entities are operating as a common enterprise,
courts look to whether the companies “(1) maintain ofﬁcers and employees in common, (2) operate
under common control, (3) share ofﬁces, (4) commingle funds, and (5) share advertising and
marketing,” FTC v. EMA. Nationwide, Inc., 767 F.3d 611, 637 (6th Cir. 2014), as well as whether
“corporate formalities are observed,” and whether the companies conduct business at arm’s length,
Sunshine Art Studios, Inc. v. FTC, 481 F.2d 1171, 1175 (lst Cir. 1973); see also CFTC v. Wall
Street Underground, Inc., 281 F. Supp. 2d 1260, 1271 (D. Kan. 2003) (ﬁnding existence of a
“common enterprise” for the purposes of the CEA where defendant companies were under
common control, did not operate at arm’s length, shared a mailing address, commingled funds and
one of the defendants advertised exclusively through the other). Under the common enterprise
theory of liability, TEN and Intrade operated as a common enterprise. TEN and Intrade were
operating under common control between 2007 and December 2014 because TEN and Intrade had

the same directors and ofﬁcers during that period. TEN’s Supp. Resp. Interrog. No. 7; Intrade’s

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Supp. Resp. Interrog. No. 7. TEN and lntrade shared ofﬁce space at multiple Dublin ofﬁces each
time the companies moved. Wolfenden lDep. at 50:21-22, 51 : 1-22, 52: 1-22, 53 : 1-4, 62:12-15, 53:5-
14. In addition, TEN and Intrade commingled ﬁinds. Importantly, TEN maintained Intrade funds
in its bank accounts from 2007 to 2012, Bernstein Dep. at 77: 1-4, ECF No. 56-1, TEN maintained
bank accounts that accepted ﬁmds from US. customers for the purpose of trading contracts based
on ﬁiture changes in the price of gold, the US. unemployment rate and US. gross domestic
product, TEN’s Resp. Req. Admis. No. 27, and Intrade transferred funds from its bank account to
TEN’s bank account on at least four different occasions, Wolfenden Dep. at 108: 1-17, 210: 10-13,
210220—22, 21118-15. Thus, since TEN and Intrade are jointly and severally liable under the
common enterprise theory of liability, TEN is liable for violating the 2005 Commission Order.
First, TEN violated the 2005 Commission Order by offering for trade through
www.intrade.com the contracts prohibited by the Commission Order. As discussed in the previous
section, during the relevant period, TEN and Intrade allowed US. customers to trade 5,503
prohibited contracts through www.intrade.com. Harris Decl. 1] 10. In addition, John Delaney, then-
director and ofﬁcer to TEN and Intrade. asked Wolfenden to “open up” commodity and currency
markets to US. customers on December 29, 2010, when the 2005 Commission Order was still in
force. Wolfenden Dep. at 112:13-15. Accordingly, Wolfenden liﬁed or caused to be lifted the
blocks on www.intrade.com which allowed US. customers to trade commodity contracts.
Wolfenden Dep. at 112: 16-22, 113:1-14, 113:15-22, 114: 1-10. Wolfenden may have lifted blocks
on currency contracts as well. Wolfenden Dep. at 114111-22, 115: 12. Although TEN argues that
“Intrade did not permit US. customers to trade contracts that were speciﬁcally identiﬁed in the
2005 Commission Order,” TEN and Intrade traded contracts that were identical to the contracts

speciﬁcally identiﬁed in the 2005 Commission Order, including contracts such as Daily Crude Oil,

15

Light Sweet Crude Oil Futures Year End, Intraday Euro versus US. Dollar Rate, and US. Dollar
versus Yen Cash Rate. 2005 Commission Order at 2; Harris Decl. {[1] 9-11.

TEN argues that it should not be responsible for the actions of its then-director and ofﬁcer
John Delaney because “record evidence exists to support a ﬁnding that Delaney was not acting
within the scope of his authority as Defendants’ representative” when he asked Wolfenden to
remove the blocks. Defs.’ Opp’n at 16-17. However, Section 2(a)(1) of the Act, 7 U.S.C. § 2, states
that “[t]he act, omission, or failure of any ofﬁcial, agent, or other person acting for any individual,
association, partnership, corporation, or trust within the scope of his employment or ofﬁce shall
be deemed the act, omission, or failure of such individual, association, partnership, corporation, or
trust, as well as of such ofﬁcial, agent, or other person.”

TEN further argues that “corporations are not responsible for an agent whose actions are
adverse to the company’s interests.” Defs. ’ Opp’n at 16 (citing BCCI Holdings (Luxembourg) SA.
v. Cliﬂord, 964 F. Supp. 468, 478 (D.D.C. 1997)). Yet TEN misstates the law of the adverse
interest exception; the exception only applies when the ofﬁcer or agent acts with an interest adverse
to the corporation. BCCI Holdings, 964 F. Supp. at 478 (holding that “the adverse interest
exception applies only to fraud against the corporation, not to fraud on behalf of the corporation”).
In this case, John Delaney was acting in scope of his employment and not with an interest adverse
to TEN. Delaney was a director of TEN from 2003 until his death in May 2011. Bernstein Dep. at
58:14-19, Dec. 18, 2014. Delaney was in charge of the daily operations at TEN and Intrade from
some time prior to 2007 until he died in May 2011. Bernstein Dep. at 59:21-22, 60: 1-22, 61 : 1-22,
62:1-22, 63:1-6, Dec. 18, 2014. Unlike Delaney’s alleged misappropriation of ﬁnds from TEN,

his decision to lift the blocks on banned contracts was not made with an interest diverse to TEN

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since it directly beneﬁted TEN by allowing the company to collect trading fees from US.
customers.

Second, TEN violated the 2005 Commission Order by violating the requirement that US.
customers be informed regarding which contracts they are not allowed to trade. As discussed
above, John Delaney ordered blocks on commodity and currency markets to be lifted. Wolfenden
Dep. at 112: 13-15. Furthermore, during the relevant period, these blocks were not in effect for a
total of 2,027 contracts in commodities, currencies, gasoline, climate and weather, and US.
economic numbers. Harris Decl. 11 16.

3d, TEN violated the 2005 Commission Order by failing to provide CFTC with written
notice of its intent to change its US. representative within fourteen days before it occurred. TEN’s
U.S. representative, Michael Philipp, Esq., withdrew as counsel for TEN in February 2012.
Answer 1] 32. TEN did not provide the CFTC with written notice regarding its intent to change the
designated U.S. representative. TEN’s Resp. Req. Admis. No. 37.

IV. CONCLUSION.

For the aforementioned reasons, the Court ﬁnds that there are no genuine disputes as to
any material fact in this case. Plaintiff’s motion for partial summary judgment on Counts I and II

will be GRANTED.
A separate order consistent with this opinion shall issue this date.

It is SO ORDERED this 3 lst day of July 2015.

ﬁg /W

ROYCE C. LAMBERTH
United States District Judge

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by “utilizing a pop-up notice that will appear when [US] customers attempt to enter orders on
those contracts.” Id at 3, 5. TEN also agreed it would “not undertake any act that would limit its
ability to ﬁllly cooperate with the Commission.” Id. at 6. At the time of the 2005 Commission
Order, TEN designated Michael Phillip, Esq. to “receive all requests for information pursuant to
this undertaking.” Id. Further, TEN agreed to give written notice to the Division of Enforcement
of intention to change the designated U.S. representative fourteen (14) days before it occurs. Id.

Intradecom is an internet-based “platform where [customers] make predictions by buying
and selling shares on the outcome of real-world events.” How Intrade Works, Intrade: The World’s
Leading Prediction Market (Dec. 28, 2011), www.intrade.com, ECF No. 47-22. “There are two
possible outcomes to each of these events — yes, the event will happen as described, or no, it will
not happen.” Id. The website allows customers to buy shares if they are predicting that the market
event will happen and to sell shares if they are predicting that the event will not happen. Id.
“Because a market will always settle at either $0.00 or $10.00, all shares are bought and sold at
prices somewhere in between.” Id. If the event occurs, the contract settles at $10; if the event does
not occur, it settles at $0. Id. The customer who purchased shares makes a proﬁt if price of the
market goes up, and the customer who sold shares makes a profit if the price of the market goes
down. Id. For example, if a customer purchases shares at $7 per share and the market settles at
$10, then the customer will make a proﬁt of $3 per share. Id.

In early 2007, TEN deconsolidated into three separate entities. TEN’s 3d Supp. Resp.

Interrog. No. 6, ECF No. 51-2. “As a result of the reorganization, which took effect on or about
February 28, 2007, TEN transferred its non-sports prediction markets and technology-related
intellectual property to Intrade.” Id. “Intrade obtained ownership of or usage rights to the

www.intrade.com domain, TEN’s customer lists and historical market data, all open nonsports

Lo)

[sic] positions on TEN’s trading platform, and orders and member ﬁinds sufficient to cover the
same.” Id. TEN and Intrade had separate corporate registration numbers under Irish law,
maintained separate bank accounts and ﬁled separate tax returns and ﬁnancial accounts. Id. During
the relevant period, most of Intrade’s shares were owned by persons who also owned shares of
TEN, with an approximately 80% overlap between the shareholders of TEN and Intrade per
director Ronald Bemstein’s “best guess.” TEN’s Resp. Req. Admis. No. 8, ECF No. 47-7;
Bernstein Dep. 48: 1-13, Dec. 18, 2014, ECF No. 56-1. TEN did not own any portion of Intrade.
TEN’s Resp. Req. Admis. No. 8. Between 2007 and December 2014, TEN and Intrade shared the
same directors (Geraldine Arnold, Imants Auzins, Patrick Caulﬁeld, Christopher Delaney, John
Delaney and Daniel Laffan) and ofﬁcers (John Delaney and Daniel Laffan). TEN’s Supp. Resp.
Interrog. No. 7, ECF No. 47-18; Intrade’s Supp. Resp. Interrog. No. 7, ECF No. 47-19. TEN had
no employees during the relevant period. TEN’s Supp. Resp. Interrog. No. 7. Between 2007 and
December 2014, TEN and Intrade shared the same premises at various offices in Dublin, Ireland.
Wolfenden Dep. 50:21-22; 5121-22; 52:1-22; 53:1-4, 53:5-14, 62:12-15, ECF No. 56-9. TEN and
Intrade “shared the same premises, addresses and ofﬁce equipment, such as copiers and
computers.” Bernstein Dep. 7511-12, Dec. 18, 2014.

During the period from September 2007 to June 25*, 2012 (the “relevant period”), TEN’S
bank accounts (in the name of Trade Exchange Network Ltd.) accepted funds from U. S. customers
for the purpose of trading contracts based on future changes in the price of gold, the US.
unemployment rate, U.S. gross domestic product ﬁgures and the price of currency pairs. TEN’s
Resps. Reqs. Admis. Nos. 27-31. TEN received these ﬁJnds “on behalf of Intrade and carried a
corresponding liability from TEN to Intrade for any and all such amounts.” TEN’s Resps. Reqs.

Admis. Nos. 27-31. Intrade also maintained bank accounts that received ﬁmds from US.

customers for the purpose of trading the abovementioned contracts. Intrade’s Resps. Reqs. Admis.

Nos. 27-31, ECF No. 47-8. From 2007 to 2012 TEN maintained Intrade ﬁnds in its bank accounts.
Bernstein Dep. 77: 1-4, Dec. 18, 2014. For example, TEN’s National Irish Bank accounts contained
funds received from Intrade account holders, including US. customers who had opened trading
accounts through www.intrade.com. Wolfenden Dep. 208:1-22, 209:1-22, 210: 1-9, 211:1-21.
Intrade and TEN also transferred ﬁmds between their respective bank accounts at various points
in 2008 and 2009. Wolfenden Dep. 108:1—17, 210:10-13, 210:20-22, 211:8-15.

During the relevant period, US customers opened trading accounts on www.intrade.com
and traded contracts based on future changes in the price of gold, the US. unemployment rate, the
US. gross domestic product ﬁgures and the price of currency pairs. Intrade’s Resp. Req. Admis.
No. 21-22, 26. Intrade offered for trading through www.intrade.com such contracts as “February
2011 (G12) Gold Futures to Close on or above 1000 on Dec 2011,” “Euro/US. Dollar to close on
or about 1.000 on 30 Dec 2011,” “US. will go into recession during 2011,” and “75 or more US.
banks to fail during 2011.” Intrade’s Resp. Req. Admis. No. 20. During the relevant period, US.
Customers traded 5,503 contracts in the areas of commodities, currencies, gasoline, climate and
weather, and US. economic numbers. Harris Decl. 1] 9, ECF No. 47—24. US. customers funded
their trading accounts by transferring money to bank accounts in Ireland in the names of Trade
Exchange Network, Ltd. or Intrade The Prediction Market, Ltd. Beyer Decl. 111] 5—6, ECF No. 47-
26; Wu Decl. 111] 5-6, ECF No. 47-27.

Between September 1, 2007 and June 25, 2012, 443 contracts in commodities, currencies,
gasoline, climate and weather, and US. economic numbers were blocked to US. customers on
www.intrade.com, while 2,027 contracts in commodities, currencies, gasoline, climate and

weather, and US. economic numbers were not blocked. Harris Decl. 11 16. At the end of 2010,

Intrade and TEN’s then-director and ofﬁcer John Delaney instructed Carl R. Wolfenden, Intrade
and TEN’s Exchange Operations Manager, to disengage the existing blocks on www.intrade.com
in order to permit US. customers to trade contracts in commodity and currency markets.
Wolfenden Dep. 110210-22, 111:3-6.

In February 2012, TEN’s former US. representative, Michael Phillipp, withdrew as
counsel. Answer 11 32. TEN did not provide the CFTC with written notice of their intent to change
their designated U.S. representative pursuant to the 2005 Commission Order. TEN’s Resp. Req.
Admis. No. 37.

On November 26, 2012, the CFT C ﬁled suit in this Court.

11. LEGAL STANDARD

Summary judgment shall be granted if “the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute
as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P.
56(a). A material fact is a fact that might affect the outcome of the case. Anderson v. Liberty Lobby,
Inc., 477 US. 242, 248 (1986). A dispute about a material fact is “genuine” if “the evidence is
such that a reasonable jury could return a verdict for the nonmoving party.” Id. “A party seeking
summary judgment always bears the initial responsibility of informing the district court of the
basis for its motion, and identifying those portions of ‘the pleadings, depositions, answers to
interrogatories, and admissions on ﬁle, together with the afﬁdavits, if any,’ which it believes
demonstrate the absence of a genuine issue of material fact.” Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 US.
317, 323 (1986) (quoting Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c)).

In making a summary judgment determination, the court must believe the evidence of the
non—moving party and draw all justiﬁable inferences in its favor. Anderson, 477 US. at 255.

However, “the mere existence of a scintilla of evidence in support of the non—moving party” is

insufﬁcient to create a genuine dispute of material fact. Id. at 252, Instead, evidence must exist on
which the jury could reasonably ﬁnd for the non-moving party. 1d.

III. ANALYSIS

A. Count I: TEN’s and Intrade’s Violations of Section 4c(b) of the Act, 7 U.S.C. § 6c(b)
(2012), and Regulation 32.11, 17 C.F.R. §32.ll (2012).

Section 4c(b) of the Act, 7 U.S.C. § 6c(b) (2012), states:
No person shall offer to enter into, enter into, or conﬁrm the

execution of, any transaction involving any commodity regulated
under [the CEA] which is of the character of, or is commonly

,, LL'

known to the trade as, an “option,” “privilege, indemnity,”
“bid,” “offer,” “put,” “call,” “advance guaranty,” or “decline
guaranty,” contrary to any rule, regulation, or order of the
Commission prohibiting any such transaction or allowing any such
transaction under such terms and conditions as the Commission
shall prescribe.

7 U.S.C. § 6c(b) (2012) (emphasis added).

Regulation 32.11 made it “unlawful . . . for any person to solicit or accept orders for, or to
accept money, securities or property in connection with, the purchase or sale of any commodity
option, or to supervise any person or persons so engaged.” 17 C.F.R. § 32.11 (2012). Regulation
32.1(b)(1) similarly deﬁnes “commodity option transaction” and “commodity option” to mean
“any transaction or agreement in interstate commerce which is or is held out to be ‘of the
character of, or is commonly known to the trade as, an ‘option’. . . .’” 17 C.F.R. §32.1(b)(1)

(2012) (emphasis added). TEN and Intrade argue that the Commission has not demonstrated that

the contracts in question ﬁt within the statutory and regulatory deﬁnitions of commodity options.

Defs.’ Opp’n at 7.

l. The Financial Instruments Available for Trading on www. intrude. com Are
Known to the Trade as Binary Options.

TEN and Intrade rely on a narrow deﬁnition of the term “option,” namely “a contractual
right to buy, or sell, a commodity, or commodity future by some speciﬁc date at a speciﬁed, ﬁxed
price, known as the ‘strike price.’” Defs.’ Opp’n at 7 (citing CF T C v. Morgan, Harris & Scott,
Ltd, 484 F. Supp. 669, 675 (S.D.N.Y. 1979)). TEN and Intrade argue that the contracts offered on
www.intrade.com are not options since they do not have certain characteristics of options under
the above deﬁnition, including a “strike price,” a “mechanism for delivery of an underlying asset,”
and a “contractual right for the buyer to buy or sell a speciﬁed quantity of a commodity at a speciﬁc
price within a speciﬁc period of time.” Defs.’ Opp’n at 9.

There is little case law on the issue of whether the ﬁnancial instruments offered by the
defendants are options under the Act. One court determined that ﬁnancial products that bear the
characteristics of the contracts offered on www.intrade.com are not “options” under a preliminary
injunction standard, but the court was not interpreting the CEA or determining whether the
ﬁnancial products are subject to the Commission’s authority. See Sec. & Exch. Comm ’n v. Bane
de Binary Ltd, 964 F. Supp. 2d 1229, 1234 (D. Nev. 2013). In another case, the court declined to
dismiss claims where the defendants relied on the argument that binary options are not “options”
subject to CFTC’s authority under the CEA and the Regulation. See US. Commodity Futures
Trading Comm ’n v. Bank de Binary, Ltd, No. 2:13—CV-000992-MMD, 2014 WL 691590, at *4
(D. Nev. Feb. 20, 2014).

The language of the Act does not limit the scope of CFTC’s regulation solely to the speciﬁc
deﬁnition suggested by the defendants. 7 U.S.C. § 6c(b) (2012). Rather, the Act prohibits “any

transaction involving any commodity regulated under [the CEA] which is of the character of, or is

9)

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commonly known to the trade as, an “option, privilege, indemnity,” bid,” “offer,” “put,
“call,” “advance guaranty,” or “decline guaranty[.]” Id. In addition, the Act itself does not
distinguish between physically-settled and cash-settled options, meaning the delivery of the
underlying asset is not a requirement. See Caiola v. Citibank, NA. N.Y., 295 F.3d 312, 325 (2d
Cir. 2002).

The contracts offered on www.intrade.com meet the characteristics of what are known to
the trade as “binary options.” “Binary options are options with discontinuous payoffs. A simple
example of a binary option is a cash-or-nothing call. This pays off nothing if the asset price ends
up below the strike price at time T and pays a ﬁxed amount, Q, if it ends up above the strike price.
. . . A cash-or-nothing put is deﬁned analogously to a cash-or-nothing call. It pays off Q if the
asset price is below the strike price and nothing if it is above the strike price.” Pl.’s Reply at 7
(citing John C. Hull, Fundamentals of Futures and Options Markets 481 (7th ed. 2011) (italics in
original, bold added), ECF No. 53-3; see also Robert W. Kolb, Futures, Options, and Swaps 583
(2d ed. 1997) (“Binary options have payoffs that are discontinuous, either paying nothing or a
considerable amount depending on the satisfaction of some condition”), ECF No. 53-3).
Ballentine’s Law Dictionary offers multiple deﬁnitions for the term “option,” including that it is a
“simple method of speculating in the rise or fall of the market price of commodities or stocks, no
actual transaction by sale or purchase being contemplated.” P1.’s Reply at 11 (citing Ballentine ’s
Law Dictionary 894 (3d ed. 1969)).

Further, these types of options are known as options in industry practice. Several
Designated Contract Markets, including the Chicago Mercantile Exchange and the North

American Derivatives Exchange, Inc, offer binary options. Pl.’s Reply at 8. NADEX offers a

wide variety of binary option markets, including stock indices, currencies, economic events, such

as jobless claims (the number of Americans applying for unemployment beneﬁts), and
commodities. See P1.’s Reply at 8 (citing Markets, NADEX, www.madexcom/markets-to-
tradehtml). NADEX deﬁnes binary options as “limited risk contracts based on a simple yes/no
market proposition like will the markets go up by the end of the trading week.” What Are Binary
Options, NADEX, www.madex.com/trade-binary-options.html. Similarly to the contracts available
at www.intrade.com, the customer’s “proﬁt/loss is calculated using the difference between the
settlement price . . . and [the customer’s] opening price.” Id.

The contracts available for trading on www.intrade.com allowed customers to make
predictions on the occurrence of events by either buying or selling shares. See How Intrade Works,
Intrade: The World’s Leading Prediction Market (Dec. 28, 2011), www.intrade.com. There are
two possible outcomes to every event — either the event will happen or it will not. See id. If a
customer predicts that the event will occur, the customer will buy shares; if the customer predicts
that the event will not occur, the customer will sell shares. Id. If the event occurs, the market will
settle at $10, and if it does not, it will settle at $0. Id. During the relevant period, Intrade offered
for trading through intradecom such contracts as “February 2011 (G12) Gold Futures to Close on
or above 1000 on Dec 2011,” “Euro/US. Dollar to close on or about 1.000 on 30 Dec 2011,” “US.
will go into recession during 2011,” and “75 or more US. banks to fail during 2011.” Intrade’s
Resp. Req. Admis. No. 20. These contracts possess all the characteristics of contracts that are
known to the trade as “binary options.”

The Supreme Court has long recognized that “the well-reasoned views of the agencies
implementing a statute ‘constitute a body of experience and informed judgment to which courts
and litigants may properly resort for guidance.” Bragdon v. Abbott, 524 US. 624 (1998) (quoting

Skidmore v. Swift & Co., 323 US. 134 (1944)); see also Chevron USA. Inc. v. Natural Resources

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