FIA'S LUKKEN CALLS FOR "NEW ERA" IN SEC-CFTC COLLABORATION
The following information was released by the
FIA President and CEO
The joint meeting was organized for the purpose of promoting better collaboration between these two agencies, a goal that FIA has long championed as critical to effective oversight and intelligent regulation.
"I commend Chair Atkins and Acting Chair Pham for holding this roundtable and setting the stage for a new era in SEC-CFTC collaboration. An open dialogue is exactly what we need to improve collaboration between these two government agencies for the benefit of all market participants," said Lukken.
The two agencies invited Lukken to draw on his experience in
After leaving government service, he ran a derivatives clearinghouse regulated by the CFTC that required approvals from the
Summary
FIA urges the
Smart regulation plays a critical role in the success of the US financial and commodity markets.
Effective collaboration among regulators is essential to ensuring proper oversight and a clear path to innovation.
The pace of change is quickening. We must have a regulatory structure that can keep up. Flexibility and a pro-innovation mindset are critical.
Given the rapid evolution of financial markets technology, effective collaboration among regulators is critical to ensure that they can detect and prevent emerging forms of fraud, market manipulationand systemic risk.
Failures to harmonize regulations across these two agencies in the past have resulted in impractical and unusable regulatory structures, most notably in the case of single stock futures.
Establishing bright lines between jurisdictions and avoiding dual oversight and overlapping regulations will provide regulatory certainty and accountability, which are critical to allowing innovative products and business models to come to market.
FIA recommends several actions that will improve collaboration between these two agencies to promote responsible innovation, conduct joint rulemakings, and create shared definitions and taxonomies.
In the pursuit of effective collaboration, we must not jeopardize the specialized expertise that both agencies bring to the oversight and regulation of their respective core markets.
Certain features of the CFTC approach to market regulation including its exclusive federal jurisdiction, its reliance on principles rather than prescriptions, and its mission focus on innovation have kept it nimble and adaptable as novel products and approaches have come online.
Lukken statement on SEC-CFTC collaboration
To complement his remarks at the roundtable, Lukken released the statement below on the benefits of SEC-CFTC collaboration.
Strong market regulators = America first in finance
"America has the premiere capital and derivatives markets in the world. This is due, in no small part, to
"In the past 25 years, we have seen five different memorandums of understanding aimed at facilitating and encouraging coordination between the agencies, including one I signed with SEC Chair
"All have been well-intentioned. But, if we are honest, they have not been enough. We must approach the problem differently and, importantly, with the American public in mind.
"This roundtable is a great example of how we can go beyond well-intentioned statements and put in place meaningful, regular and structured engagement between the two agencies.
"Tone from the top is important. And public accountability is equally so.
The CFTC's unique structure
"As we discuss ways to encourage innovation and coordination between agencies, I would note some of the provisions within the CFTC structure that have encouraged innovation in the derivatives markets over the years.
"It begins with the agency's mission that requires the CFTC to promote responsible innovation and fair competition. With the passage of the CFMA,
Harmonization can prevent failures
"As we think through ways to improve the harmonization between agencies, it may prove useful to discuss where jurisdictional disputes have led to regulatory and market failure. One example is security futures products.
"Single stock futures were banned in the US until passage of the CFMA in 2000. That law established a joint regulatory structure for the products with dual responsibilities for both agencies. While there was great excitement with the launch of this new class of products, only two exchanges ever registered as security futures exchanges and neither remains in business today. Critics blame the dual regulation for their demise. Others blame the equities-style margin requirement on a futures-style product. In many ways the product was doomed from its start.
What are the lessons to be learned?
"First and foremost, we need bright jurisdictional lines so people know what rules apply to which product to support the innovative nature of our markets. The markets want clear, legal certainty and one set of rules. I know Paul mentioned this last week, and I agree wholeheartedly.
"Second, dual regulation does not work. Regulatory systems are indeed holistic systems that make it difficult to pick and choose rules from two regulatory frameworks and expect that to work. These hybrid structures create uncertainty, unnecessary costs and lowest-common-denominator thinking.
"While we should avoid dual regulation, strong information sharing, cooperative examinations and coordinated enforcement are imperative to serve both agencies' interests. This is similar to how domestic regulators have successfully recognized foreign regulatory approaches. If it works across international borders, surely it can work between two US agencies three miles apart.
"Lastly, political will and accountability matters. If harmonization is left to the respective staff members of both agencies, it will never be achieved. I have tremendous respect for the staff of both agencies, but their roles are to enforce their respective lawsnot to take risks on innovative new structures. That is the role of the Commissions, and they must be the ones that drive harmonization.
"With those lessons, I offer these four suggestions to the Commissions.
Four ideas for the future
"First, the agencies should permanently reinstate the
"Second, this
"Third, the
"Lastly, the agencies could begin cross-agency training and systematic secondment to improve the knowledge and trust levels of both agencies. Coordination requires trust and more cross-pollination among staff would surely benefit these efforts.
"The pace of change is undoubtedly quickening in our markets. We must have a regulatory structure that can keep up with the markets."
-END-
For media inquiries, please contact:
FIA's communications team [email protected]



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