[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 250 (Thursday, December 30, 2010)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 82490-82533]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-32085]



[[Page 82489]]

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Part IV





Securities and Exchange Commission





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17 CFR Parts 240 and 249



Process for Submissions for Review of Security-Based Swaps for 
Mandatory Clearing and Notice Filing Requirements for Clearing 
Agencies; Technical Amendments to Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4 Applicable 
to All Self-Regulatory Organizations; Proposed Rule

  Federal Register / Vol. 75 , No. 250 / Thursday, December 30, 2010 / 
Proposed Rules  

[[Page 82490]]


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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

17 CFR Parts 240 and 249

[Release No. 34-63557; File No. S7-44-10]
RIN 3235-AK87


Process for Submissions for Review of Security-Based Swaps for 
Mandatory Clearing and Notice Filing Requirements for Clearing 
Agencies; Technical Amendments to Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4 Applicable 
to All Self-Regulatory Organizations

AGENCY: Securities and Exchange Commission.

ACTION: Proposed rule.

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SUMMARY: In accordance with Section 763(a) of the Dodd-Frank Wall 
Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010 (``Dodd-Frank Act''), 
the Securities and Exchange Commission (``Commission'') is proposing 
rules under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (``Exchange Act'') to 
specify the process for a registered clearing agency's submission for 
review of any security-based swap, or any group, category, type or 
class of security-based swaps, that the clearing agency plans to accept 
for clearing, the manner of notice the clearing agency must provide to 
its members of such submission and the procedure by which the 
Commission may stay the requirement that a security-based swap is 
subject to mandatory clearing while the clearing of the security-based 
swap is reviewed. The Commission also is proposing to specify that when 
a security-based swap is required to be cleared, the submission of the 
security-based swap for clearing must be for central clearing to a 
clearing agency that functions as a central counterparty. In addition, 
the Commission is proposing rules to define and describe when notices 
of proposed changes to rules, procedures or operations are required to 
be filed by designated financial market utilities in accordance with 
Section 806(e) of Title VIII of the Dodd-Frank Act and to set forth the 
process for filing such notices with the Commission. Furthermore, the 
Commission is proposing rules to make conforming changes as required by 
the amendments to Section 19(b) of the Exchange Act contained in 
Section 916 of the Dodd-Frank Act.

DATES: Comments should be received on or before February 14, 2011.

ADDRESSES: Comments may be submitted by any of the following methods:

Electronic Comments

     Use the Commission's Internet comment form(http://www.sec.gov/rules/proposed.shtml); or
     Send an e-mail to [email protected]. Please include 
File Number S7-44-10 on the subject line; or
     Use the Federal eRulemaking Portal (http://www.regulations.gov). Follow the instructions for submitting comments.

Paper Comments

     Send paper comments in triplicate to Elizabeth M. Murphy, 
Securities and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC 
20549-1090.

All submissions should refer to File Number S7-44-10. This file number 
should be included on the subject line if e-mail is used. To help us 
process and review your comments more efficiently, please use only one 
method. The Commission will post all comments on the Commission's 
Internet Web site (http://www.sec.gov/rules/proposed.shtml). Comments 
also are available for Web site viewing and printing in the 
Commission's Public Reference Room, 100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC 
20549 on official business days between the hours of 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. 
All comments received will be posted without change; we do not edit 
personal identifying information from submissions. You should submit 
only information that you wish to make available publicly.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Kim Allen, Attorney Fellow, Catherine 
Moore, Senior Special Counsel, Kenneth Riitho, Special Counsel or 
Andrew Bernstein, Attorney-Advisor, at (202) 551-5710; Office of 
Clearance and Settlement, Division of Trading and Markets, Securities 
and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC 20549-7010.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Dodd-Frank Act seeks to ensure that, 
wherever possible and appropriate, derivatives contracts formerly 
traded exclusively in the over-the-counter (``OTC'') market be 
cleared.\1\ One key way in which the Dodd-Frank Act promotes clearing 
of such contracts is by setting forth a process by which the Commission 
would determine whether a security-based swap is required to be 
cleared; if the Commission makes a determination that a security-based 
swap is required to be cleared, then parties may not engage in such 
security-based swap without submitting it for clearing unless an 
exception applies.
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    \1\ See, e.g., Report of the Senate Committee on Banking, 
Housing, and Urban Affairs regarding The Restoring American 
Financial Stability Act of 2010, S. Rep. No. 111-176 at 34 (stating 
that ``[s]ome parts of the OTC market may not be suitable for 
clearing and exchange trading due to individual business needs of 
certain users. Those users should retain the ability to engage in 
customized, uncleared contracts while bringing in as much of the OTC 
market under the centrally cleared and exchange-traded framework as 
possible.'').
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    The Commission may determine that a security-based swap is required 
to be cleared based on a review of a clearing agency's submission 
regarding a security-based swap, or any group, category, type or class 
of security-based swaps, that the clearing agency plans to accept for 
clearing (i.e., a Security-Based Swap Submission (as defined 
below)).\2\ If the Commission determines that a security-based swap is 
not required to be cleared, such security-based swap may still be 
cleared on a non-mandatory basis by the clearing agency if the clearing 
agency has rules that permit it to clear such security-based swap.\3\ 
In addition, paragraph (b)(1) of new Section 3C of the Exchange Act, as 
added by Section 763(a) of the Dodd-Frank Act (``Exchange Act Section 
3C'') provides that ``[t]he Commission on an ongoing basis shall review 
each security-based swap, or any group, category, type, or class of 
security-based swaps to make a determination that such security-based 
swap, or group, category, type, or class of security-based swaps should 
be required to be cleared'' (``Commission-initiated Review'').\4\
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    \2\ See Public Law 111-203, section 763(a) (adding Exchange Act 
Section 3C(b)(2)(C)) (``[t]he Commission shall * * * review each 
submission made under subparagraphs (A) and (B), and determine 
whether the security-based swap, or group, category, type, or class 
of security-based swaps, described in the submission is required to 
be cleared.'').
    \3\ See 15 U.S.C. 78s(b) and 12 U.S.C. 5465(e).
    \4\ See Public Law 111-203, section 763(a) (adding Exchange Act 
Section 3C(b)(1)). The Dodd-Frank Act does not require rulemaking 
with respect to Commission-initiated Reviews.
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    Consistent with the policy objective of the Dodd-Frank Act to bring 
security-based swaps into a central clearing environment where 
appropriate, the Commission is proposing to amend Rule 19b-4 under the 
Exchange Act to incorporate two new requirements applicable to clearing 
agencies under Exchange Act Section 3C, and under Section 806(e) of the 
Dodd-Frank Act (``Section 806(e)''). The proposed amendments to Rule 
19b-4 would mandate that submissions required under Exchange Act 
Section 3C for a security-based swap, or any group, category, type or 
class of security-based swaps, that a clearing agency plans to accept 
for clearing (``Security-Based Swap Submissions'') and advance notices 
required under Section 806(e) of proposed changes to rules, procedures

[[Page 82491]]

or operations of financial market utilities (``Advance Notices'') be 
filed with the Commission on Form 19b-4. The proposed amendments to 
Rule 19b-4 also would specify the manner of notice the clearing agency 
must provide to its members of Security-Based Swap Submissions.
    Additionally, the Commission is proposing two related rules under 
Exchange Act Section 3C. Proposed Rule 3Ca-1 would establish the 
procedure by which the Commission, at the request of a counterparty or 
on its own initiative, may stay the requirement that a security-based 
swap is subject to mandatory clearing. Proposed Rule 3Ca-2 is intended 
to prevent evasions of the clearing requirement by specifying that 
security-based swaps required to be cleared must be submitted for 
central clearing to a clearing agency that functions as a central 
counterparty. Finally, the Commission is proposing technical, 
conforming and clarifying amendments to Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4 to 
conform the rule and form with new deadlines and approval, disapproval 
and temporary suspension standards with respect to proposed rule 
changes filed under Section 19(b) of the Exchange Act, as modified by 
Section 916 of the Dodd-Frank Act (``Exchange Act Section 19(b)'').

I. Introduction

    On July 21, 2010, the President signed the Dodd-Frank Act into 
law.\5\ The Dodd-Frank Act was enacted to, among other purposes, 
promote the financial stability of the United States by improving 
accountability and transparency in the financial system and by 
providing for enhanced regulation and oversight of institutions 
designated as systemically important.\6\ Title VII and Title VIII of 
the Dodd-Frank Act are intended to further these goals and to mitigate 
systemic risk in part by imposing new requirements with respect to 
clearance and settlement systems.
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    \5\ The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection 
Act (Pub. L. 111-203, H.R. 4173).
    \6\ See Public Law 111-203, Preamble.
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    Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Act (``Title VII'') provides the 
Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (``CFTC'') with 
enhanced authority to regulate OTC derivatives following the recent 
financial crisis.\7\ The Dodd-Frank Act is intended to bolster the 
existing regulatory structure and provide regulatory tools to oversee 
the OTC derivatives market, which has grown exponentially in recent 
years and is capable of affecting significant sectors of the U.S. 
economy. Title VII provides that the CFTC will regulate ``swaps,'' the 
Commission will regulate ``security-based swaps,'' and the CFTC and the 
Commission will jointly regulate ``mixed swaps.'' \8\
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    \7\ See, e.g, Report of the Senate Committee on Banking, 
Housing, and Urban Affairs regarding The Restoring American 
Financial Stability Act of 2010, S. Rep. No. 111-176 at 29 (2010) 
(stating that ``[m]any factors led to the unraveling of this 
country's financial sector and the government intervention to 
correct it, but a major contributor to the financial crisis was the 
unregulated [OTC] derivatives market.'')
    \8\ Section 712(d) of the Dodd-Frank Act provides that the 
Commission and the CFTC, in consultation with the Board of Governors 
of the Federal Reserve System, shall jointly further define the 
terms ``swap,'' ``security-based swap,'' ``swap dealer,'' 
``security-based swap dealer,'' ``major swap participant,'' ``major 
security-based swap participant,'' ``eligible contract 
participant,'' and ``security-based swap agreement.'' These terms 
are defined in Sections 721 and 761 of the Dodd-Frank Act and, with 
respect to the term ``eligible contract participant,'' in Section 
1a(18) of the Commodity Exchange Act, 7 U.S.C. 1a(18), as re-
designated and amended by Section 721 of the Dodd-Frank Act. 
Further, Section 721(c) of the Dodd-Frank Act requires the CFTC to 
adopt a rule to further define the terms ``swap,'' ``swap dealer,'' 
``major swap participant,'' and ``eligible contract participant,'' 
and Section 761(b) of the Dodd-Frank Act permits the Commission to 
adopt a rule to further define the terms ``security-based swap,'' 
``security-based swap dealer,'' ``major security-based swap 
participant,'' and ``eligible contract participant,'' with regard to 
security-based swaps, for the purpose of including transactions and 
entities that have been structured to evade Title VII of the Dodd-
Frank Act. Finally, Section 712(a) of the Dodd-Frank Act provides 
that the Commission and CFTC, after consultation with the Board, 
shall jointly prescribe regulations regarding ``mixed swaps'' as may 
be necessary to carry out the purposes of Title VII. To assist the 
Commission and CFTC in further defining the terms specified above, 
and to prescribe regulations regarding ``mixed swaps'' as may be 
necessary to carry out the purposes of Title VII, the Commission and 
the CFTC have requested comment from interested parties. See 
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 62717 (Aug. 13, 2010), 75 FR 
51429 (Aug. 20, 2010) (Advance Joint Notice of Proposed Rulemaking 
Regarding Definitions Contained in Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Act).
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    The OTC derivatives markets traditionally have been characterized 
by privately negotiated transactions entered into by two 
counterparties, in which each assumes the credit risk of the other 
counterparty.\9\ Clearing of swaps and security-based swaps was at the 
heart of Congressional reform of the derivatives markets in Title VII 
of the Dodd Frank Act.\10\ Clearing agencies are broadly defined under 
the Exchange Act and undertake a variety of functions.\11\ One such 
function is to act as a central counterparty (``CCP''), which is an 
entity that interposes itself between the counterparties to a 
trade.\12\ For example, when an OTC derivatives contract between two 
counterparties that are members of a CCP is executed and submitted for 
clearing, it is typically replaced by two new contracts--separate 
contracts between the CCP and each of the two original counterparties. 
At that point, the original counterparties are no longer counterparties 
to each other. Instead, each acquires the CCP as its counterparty, and 
the CCP assumes the counterparty credit risk of each of the original 
counterparties that are members of the CCP.\13\ Structured and operated 
appropriately, CCPs may improve the management of counterparty risk and 
may provide additional benefits such as multilateral netting of trades.
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    \9\ See, e.g., Financial Stability Board, Implementing OTC 
Derivatives Market Reforms (Oct. 25, 2010) available at http://www.financialstabilityboard.org/publications/r_101025.pdf.
    \10\ As previously noted, the Dodd-Frank Act seeks to ensure 
that, wherever possible and appropriate, derivatives contracts 
formerly traded exclusively in the OTC market be cleared. See Letter 
from Christopher Dodd, Chairman, Committee on Banking, Housing and 
Urban Affairs, United States Senate and Blanche Lincoln, Chairman, 
Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry, United States 
Senate, to Barney Frank, Chairman, Financial Services Committee, 
United States House of Representatives and Colin Peterson, Chairman, 
Committee on Agriculture, United States House of Representatives 
(June 30, 2010) (on file with the United States Senate).
    \11\ The term ``clearing agency'' means any person who acts as 
an intermediary in making payments or deliveries or both in 
connection with transactions in securities or who provides 
facilities for the comparison of data regarding the terms of 
settlement of securities transactions, to reduce the number of 
settlements of securities transactions, or the allocation of 
securities settlement responsibilities. Such term also means any 
person, such as a securities depository, who (i) acts as a custodian 
of securities in connection with a system for the central handling 
of securities whereby all securities of a particular class or series 
of any issuer deposited within the system are treated as fungible 
and may be transferred, loaned, or pledged by bookkeeping entry 
without physical delivery of securities certificates, or (ii) 
otherwise permits or facilitates the settlement of securities 
transactions or the hypothecation or lending of securities without 
physical delivery of securities certificates. 15 U.S.C. 
78c(a)(23)(A).
    \12\ See id. An entity that acts as a CCP for securities 
transactions is a clearing agency as defined in the Exchange Act and 
is required to register with the Commission.
    \13\ See Cecchetti, Gyntelberg and Hollanders, Central 
counterparties for over-the-counter derivatives, BIS Quarterly 
Review, September 2009, available at http://www.bis.org/publ/qtrpdf/r_qt0909f.pdf.
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    Exchange Act Section 3C sets forth a mandatory clearing requirement 
for security-based swaps. This section requires the Commission to adopt 
rules for submissions for review of security-based swaps that a 
clearing agency plans to accept for clearing for a determination by the 
Commission of whether the security-based swap (or group, category, type 
or class of security-based swaps) is required to be cleared, i.e., is 
subject to mandatory

[[Page 82492]]

clearing.\14\ The Commission is proposing amendments to Rule 19b-4 
under the Exchange Act to implement the requirement in Exchange Act 
Section 3C that a clearing agency submit for Commission review each 
security-based swap, or any group, category, type or class of security-
based swaps, that the clearing agency plans to accept for clearing and 
provide notice to its members of such Security-Based Swap Submission. 
The Commission also is proposing new Rules 3Ca-1 and 3Ca-2 under the 
Exchange Act. Proposed Rule 3Ca-1 specifies the procedure for staying 
the clearing requirement applicable to a security-based swap, based 
either on an application of a counterparty to a security-based swap or 
on the Commission's own initiative, until the Commission completes a 
review of the terms of the security-based swap and the clearing 
arrangement. Proposed Rule 3Ca-2 establishes a rule designed to prevent 
evasions of the clearing requirement by specifying that security-based 
swaps required to be cleared must be submitted for central clearing to 
a clearing agency that functions as a central counterparty.
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    \14\ Public Law 111-203, section 763(a) (adding Exchange Act 
Section 3C(b)(2)(C)).
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    The Commission also is proposing rules to implement a filing 
requirement applicable to certain clearing agencies under Title VIII of 
the Dodd-Frank Act (``Title VIII''). Title VIII provides for enhanced 
regulation of financial market utilities, which include clearing 
agencies, that manage or operate a multilateral system for the purpose 
of transferring, clearing or settling payments, securities or other 
financial transactions among financial institutions or between 
financial institutions and the financial market utility.\15\ The 
regulatory regime in Title VIII will only apply, however, to financial 
market utilities that the Financial Stability Oversight Council 
(``Council'') designates as systemically important.\16\
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    \15\ The definition of ``financial market utility'' in Section 
803(6) of the Dodd-Frank Act contains a number of exclusions 
including but not limited to certain designated contract markets, 
registered futures associations, swap data repositories, swap 
execution facilities, national securities exchanges, national 
securities associations, alternative trading systems, security-based 
swap data repositories, security-based swap execution facilities, 
brokers, dealers, transfer agents, investment companies and futures 
commission merchants. 12 U.S.C. 5462(6)(B).
    \16\ Pursuant to Section 803(9) of the Dodd-Frank Act, a 
financial market utility is systemically important if the failure of 
or a disruption to the functioning of such financial market utility 
could create, or increase, the risk of significant liquidity or 
credit problems spreading among financial institutions or markets 
and thereby threaten the stability of the financial system of the 
United States. 12 U.S.C. 5462(9). Under Section 804 of the Dodd-
Frank Act, the Council has the authority, on a non-delegable basis 
and by a vote of not fewer than two-thirds of the members then 
serving, including the affirmative vote of its chairperson, to 
designate those financial market utilities that the Council 
determines are, or are likely to become, systemically important. The 
Council may, using the same procedures as discussed above, rescind 
such designation if it determines that the financial market utility 
no longer meets the standards for systemic importance. Before making 
either determination, the Council is required to consult with the 
Board and the relevant Supervisory Agency (as determined in 
accordance with Section 803(8) of the Dodd-Frank Act). Finally, 
Section 804 of the Dodd-Frank Act sets forth the procedures for 
giving entities a 30-day notice and the opportunity for a hearing 
prior to a designation or rescission of the designation of systemic 
importance. 12 U.S.C. 5463.
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    Section 806(e)(1)(A) of Title VIII requires any financial market 
utility designated by the Council under Section 804 of the Dodd-Frank 
Act as systemically important to file 60 days advance notice of changes 
to its rules, procedures or operations that could materially affect the 
nature or level of risk presented by the financial market utility.\17\ 
In addition, Section 806(e)(1)(B) requires each Supervisory Agency \18\ 
to adopt rules, in consultation with the Board of Governors of the 
Federal Reserve System (``Board''), that define and describe when 
designated financial market utilities are required to file Advance 
Notices with their Supervisory Agency.\19\
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    \17\ 12 U.S.C. 5465(e)(1)(A).
    \18\ Section 803(8) of the Dodd-Frank Act defines the term 
``Supervisory Agency'' in reference to the primary regulatory 
authority for the financial market utility. For example, Section 
803(8) of the Dodd-Frank Act provides that the Commission is the 
Supervisory Agency for any financial market utility that is a 
Commission-registered clearing agency. See 12 U.S.C. 5462(8). To the 
extent that an entity is both a Commission-registered clearing 
agency and registered with another agency, such as a CFTC-registered 
derivatives clearing organization, the statute requires the two 
agencies to agree on one agency to act as the Supervisory Agency, 
and if the agencies cannot agree on which agency has primary 
jurisdiction, the Council shall decide which agency is the 
Supervisory Agency for purposes of the Dodd-Frank Act. 12 U.S.C. 
5462(8).
    \19\ 12 U.S.C. 5465(e)(1)(B).
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    Clearing agencies registered with the Commission are financial 
market utilities, as defined in Section 803(6) of Title VIII; \20\ 
thus, the Commission may be the Supervisory Agency of a clearing agency 
that is designated as systemically important by the Council 
(``designated clearing agency'').\21\ A clearing agency must begin 
filing Advance Notices pursuant to Section 806(e) once the Council 
designates the clearing agency as systemically important.\22\ The 
Commission is proposing to implement the Section 806(e) filing 
requirement by amending Rule 19b-4 to define and determine when Advance 
Notices must be filed by designated clearing agencies and to require 
that Advance Notices be filed on Form 19b-4.
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    \20\ 12 U.S.C. 5462(6).
    \21\ See supra note 18 discussing the definition of 
``Supervisory Agency'' under the Dodd-Frank Act.
    \22\ Pursuant to Section 814 of the Dodd Frank Act, Title VIII 
took effect on the date of enactment.
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    The Commission is proposing that Security-Based Swap Submissions 
and Advance Notices be filed with the Commission on Form 19b-4 using 
the existing Electronic Form 19b-4 Filing System (``EFFS''). Currently, 
EFFS is used by self-regulatory organizations (``SROs''), which include 
registered clearing agencies,\23\ to file proposed rule changes 
electronically with the Commission pursuant to Exchange Act Section 
19(b).\24\ The Commission is proposing to require clearing agencies to 
use EFFS for the filing of Security-Based Swap Submissions and Advance 
Notices because registered clearing agencies already use EFFS for 
Exchange Act Section 19(b) filings and because there are similarities 
between the requirement to file proposed rule changes under Exchange 
Act Section 19(b) and the new requirements under the Dodd-Frank Act to 
file Security-Based Swap Submissions and Advance Notices. For example, 
a proposed rule change under Exchange Act Section 19(b) includes a 
change in a ``stated policy, practice, or interpretation'' of an SRO 
rule. A ``stated policy, practice, or interpretation'' is defined in 
Exchange Act Section 19(b) as ``any material aspect of the operation of 
the facilities of the SRO; or any statement made generally available to 
the membership of, to all participants in, or to persons having or 
seeking access * * * to facilities of, the self-regulatory organization 
(``specified persons''), or to a group or category of specified 
persons, that establishes or changes any standard, limit, or guideline 
with respect to (1) the rights, obligations, or privileges of specified 
persons * * *; or (2) the meaning, administration, or enforcement of an 
existing rule.'' \25\ In cases where accepting a security-based swap 
(or group, category, type or class of security-based swaps) for 
clearing constitutes a change in a ``stated policy, practice, or 
interpretation'' of the clearing agency, the clearing agency also

[[Page 82493]]

would be required to file a proposed rule change. Similarly, if a 
change that a designated clearing agency proposes to make that would 
require an Advance Notice would also constitute a change in a ``stated 
policy, practice, or interpretation'' of the clearing agency, the 
clearing agency would be required to file a proposed rule change in 
addition to the Advance Notice.
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    \23\ The definition of SRO in Section 3(a)(26) of the Exchange 
Act includes any registered clearing agency. 15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(26). 
All SROs are required to file proposed rule changes with the 
Commission under Exchange Act Section 19(b). 15 U.S.C. 78s(b).
    \24\ SROs are required to file with the Commission, in 
accordance with rules prescribed by the Commission, copies of any 
proposed rule or any proposed change in, addition to, or deletion 
from the rules of the SRO (collectively referred to as a ``proposed 
rule change''). 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
    \25\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4(c).
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    The Commission also is proposing to amend Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4 
to conform to the requirements specified in Exchange Act Section 19(b), 
as amended by Section 916 of the Dodd Frank Act.\26\ Section 916 
provides new deadlines by which the Commission must publish and act 
upon proposed rule changes submitted by SROs and new standards for 
approval, disapproval and temporary suspension of proposed rule 
changes.\27\ In addition, the Commission is proposing a number of 
technical and clarifying amendments to Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4.
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    \26\ Public Law 111-203, section 916 (amending Exchange Act 
Section 19(b)(2)).
    \27\ Id.
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    In proposing these rules, the Commission is mindful that there are 
differences between the security-based swap market and the other 
securities markets that the Commission regulates. The Commission also 
is mindful that over time and as a result of Commission proposals to 
implement the Dodd-Frank Act, further development of the security-based 
swap market may alter the policy objectives and considerations relating 
to the clearing of security-based swaps. During the process of 
implementing the Dodd-Frank Act and beyond, the Commission therefore 
will closely monitor developments in the security-based swap market, 
including how the Security-Based Swap Submission and clearing processes 
interact with the evolving business and practices of security-based 
swap clearing agencies and other entities.

II. Discussion of the Proposed Rules

    The Commission is proposing to adopt rules to implement the new 
requirements imposed by Title VII and Title VIII discussed above. In 
accordance with the requirements set forth in Exchange Act Section 3C 
(found in Title VII), the Commission is proposing amendments to Rule 
19b-4 and Form 19b-4 and new Rule 3Ca-1 under the Exchange Act to 
establish processes for (i) clearing agencies registered with the 
Commission to submit for review each security-based swap, or any group, 
category, type or class of security-based swaps, that the clearing 
agency plans to accept for clearing for a determination by the 
Commission of whether the security-based swap (or group, category, type 
or class of security-based swaps) is required to be cleared, and to 
determine the manner of notice the clearing agency must provide to its 
members of such submission and (ii) how the Commission may stay the 
requirement that a security-based swap is subject to mandatory 
clearing. The Commission also is proposing new Rule 3Ca-2 to prevent 
evasions of the clearing requirement. In addition, the Commission is 
proposing amendments to Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4 to implement the 
requirement, pursuant to Section 806(e), that any designated clearing 
agency for which the Commission is the Supervisory Agency will be 
required to provide advance notice to the Commission of changes to its 
rules, procedures or operations that could materially affect the nature 
or level of risks presented by the designated clearing agency. This 
release also discusses the filing requirements in Exchange Act Section 
19(b), Exchange Act Section 3C, and Section 806(e) and a clearing 
agency's obligation to fully comply with and seek a determination 
pursuant to each separate statutory requirement, when applicable.

A. Security-Based Swap Submissions

    Exchange Act Section 3C creates, among other things, a clearing 
requirement with respect to security-based swaps. Specifically, the 
section provides that ``[i]t shall be unlawful for any person to engage 
in a security-based swap unless that person submits such security-based 
swap for clearing to a clearing agency that is registered under this 
Act or a clearing agency that is exempt from registration under this 
Act if the security-based swap is required to be cleared.'' \28\
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    \28\ See Public Law 111-203, section 763(a) (adding Exchange Act 
Section 3C(a)(1)). The requirement that a security-based swap be 
cleared stems from a determination by the Commission. Such 
determination may be made in connection with the review of a 
clearing agency's submission regarding a security-based swap, or any 
group, category, type or class of security-based swaps, that the 
clearing agency plans to accept for clearing (i.e., a Security-Based 
Swap Submission). See Public Law 111-203, section 763(a) (adding 
Exchange Act Section 3C(b)(2)(C)) (``[t]he Commission shall * * * 
review each submission made under subparagraphs (A) and (B), and 
determine whether the security-based swap, or group, category, type, 
or class of security-based swaps, described in the submission is 
required to be cleared.''). In addition, Exchange Act Section 
3C(b)(1) provides that ``[t]he Commission on an ongoing basis shall 
review each security-based swap, or any group, category, type, or 
class of security-based swaps to make a determination that such 
security-based swap, or group, category, type, or class of security-
based swaps should be required to be cleared.''
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    Exchange Act Section 3C requires the Commission, not later than one 
year after the date of the enactment of the Dodd-Frank Act, to adopt 
rules for a clearing agency's Security-Based Swap Submissions and to 
determine the manner of notice the clearing agency must provide to its 
members of such Security-Based Swap Submission.\29\ In connection with 
rulemaking related to Security-Based Swap Submissions, the Commission 
is proposing rules related to (i) the process for making Security-Based 
Swap Submissions to the Commission, (ii) the substance of Security-
Based Swap Submissions and (iii) the timing related to Security-Based 
Swap Submissions. The Commission also is proposing a process and timing 
for clearing agencies to provide notice to their members of Security-
Based Swap Submissions.
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    \29\ See Public Law 111-203, section 763(a) (adding Exchange Act 
Section 3C(b)(2)(A)).
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1. Process for Making Security-Based Swap Submissions to the Commission
    A clearing agency that plans to accept a security-based swap for 
clearing must file a Security-Based Swap Submission with the Commission 
for a determination by the Commission of whether a security-based swap, 
or a group, category, type or class of security-based swaps, is 
required to be cleared. As discussed in Section I, in cases where 
accepting a security-based swap (or group, category, type or class of 
security-based swaps) for clearing constitutes a change in a ``stated 
policy, practice, or interpretation'' of the clearing agency, the 
clearing agency also would be required to file a proposed rule change. 
In such cases, the Commission must determine (i) whether to approve the 
clearing agency's proposed rule change to clear the applicable 
security-based swap and (ii) whether the security-based swap would be 
subject to the mandatory clearing requirement.
    The Commission is proposing to require clearing agencies to use 
EFFS and Form 19b-4 for Security-Based Swap Submissions. Clearing 
agencies, as SROs, are already required to file proposed rule changes 
on Form 19b-4 on EFFS. Using the same filing process for Security-Based 
Swap Submissions would leverage existing technology and reduce the 
resources clearing agencies would have to expend on meeting Commission 
filing requirements. In addition, the Commission anticipates that a 
submission to clear a security-based swap, or any group, category, type 
or class of security-based swaps, may be required to be filed under 
both

[[Page 82494]]

Exchange Act Section 19(b) and Exchange Act Section 3C. This is because 
a submission that must be filed with the Commission for a determination 
under new Exchange Act Section 3C also may qualify as a proposed rule 
change that must be filed with the Commission under Exchange Act 
Section 19(b).\30\ In other words, the two filing requirements are not 
mutually exclusive. Because a clearing agency may be required to file 
the same proposal under Exchange Act Section 3C and Exchange Act 
Section 19(b), the Commission preliminarily believes that the most 
efficient use of the Commission's and clearing agencies' resources 
would be to require clearing agencies to use the existing Form 19b-4 
filing process for both types of filings. Accordingly, the proposed 
rules related to the Security-Based Swap Submission process would be 
added to existing Rule 19b-4, which currently governs the process for 
filing proposed rule changes.
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    \30\ A clearing agency rule is defined broadly in the Exchange 
Act to include the constitution, articles of incorporation, by-laws, 
and rules, or instruments corresponding to the foregoing. 15 U.S.C. 
78c(a)(27). The Commission anticipates that a proposal to clear a 
new type, category or class of security-based swap will in many 
cases also be a change to the rules of a registered clearing agency 
that must be filed with the Commission for approval pursuant to 
Exchange Act Section 19(b).
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    The Commission's proposed approach would eliminate the need for 
multiple submissions to the Commission and could be accomplished by 
adding a box to Form 19b-4 that clearing agencies would check to 
indicate that they are making a Security-Based Swap Submission. As a 
practical matter, the Commission believes that when a security-based 
swap is submitted for review under Exchange Act Section 3C and 
concurrently filed under Exchange Act Section 19(b) as a proposed rule 
change, the two reviews will be carried out in tandem. In circumstances 
where no proposed rule change filing would be required, such as a case 
where a clearing agency's rules already permit it to clear the 
security-based swap in question, EFFS and Form 19b-4 still would be 
used for the Security-Based Swap Submission.
a. Substance of Security-Based Swap Submissions: Consistency With 
Exchange Act Section 17A
    In reviewing a Security-Based Swap Submission, the Commission is 
required to review whether the submission is consistent with Exchange 
Act Section 17A.\31\ Accordingly, the Commission is proposing that each 
Security-Based Swap Submission contain a statement regarding how the 
submission is consistent with Exchange Act Section 17A.\32\ Exchange 
Act Section 17A specifies, among other things, that the Commission is 
directed, having due regard for the public interest, the protection of 
investors, the safeguarding of securities and funds and maintenance of 
fair competition among brokers and dealers, clearing agencies, and 
transfer agents, to use its authority to facilitate the establishment 
of a national system for the prompt and accurate clearance and 
settlement of transactions in securities.\33\
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    \31\ See Public Law 111-203, section 763(a) (adding Exchange Act 
Section 3C(b)(4)(A)).
    \32\ Proposed Rule 19b-4(o)(3)(i).
    \33\ 15 U.S.C. 78q-1.
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    The Commission must review whether a proposed rule change filed by 
an SRO pursuant to Exchange Act Section 19(b) is consistent with 
Exchange Act Section 17A.\34\ In connection with proposed rule changes, 
an SRO is required to ``explain why the proposed rule change is 
consistent with the requirements of the [Exchange] Act and the rules 
and regulations thereunder applicable to the [SRO]. A mere assertion 
that the proposed rule change is consistent with those requirements is 
not sufficient.'' \35\ Presently, in complying with this requirement, 
registered clearing agencies, among other things, specify how the 
proposed rule change is consistent with the requirements under Exchange 
Act Section 17A(b)(3). All registered clearing agencies must comply 
with the standards in Exchange Act Section 17A, which include 
requirements under Exchange Act Section 17A(b)(3) to maintain rules for 
promoting the prompt and accurate clearance and settlement of 
securities transactions, assuring the safeguarding of securities and 
funds which are in the custody or control of the clearing agency or for 
which it is responsible, fostering cooperation and coordination with 
persons engaged in the clearance and settlement of securities 
transactions, removing impediments to and perfecting the mechanism of a 
national system for the prompt and accurate clearance and settlement of 
securities transactions, and, in general, protecting investors and the 
public interest.\36\\\ A registered clearing agency is also required 
under Exchange Act Section 17A(b)(3) to provide fair access to clearing 
and to have the capacity to facilitate the prompt and accurate 
clearance and settlement of securities transactions and derivative 
agreements, contracts, and transactions for which it is responsible, as 
well as to safeguard securities and funds in its custody or control or 
for which it is responsible.\37\ Under the proposed amendments to Rule 
19b-4, a clearing agency would be required to specify how the Security-
Based Swap Submission is consistent with Exchange Act Section 17A and 
specifically the requirements applicable under subsection 17A(b)(3).
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    \34\ See 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2)(C)(i), which provides that the 
Commission shall approve a proposed rule change of an SRO if it 
finds that such proposed rule change is consistent with the 
requirements of the Exchange Act and the rules and regulations 
issued thereunder that are applicable to such organization.
    \35\ Item 3(b) of Form 19b-4. 17 CFR 240.819. Exchange Act 
Section 19(b) has a similar but not identical requirement. It 
requires that an SRO provide a statement of the basis of the 
proposed rule change and provides that the Commission shall only 
approve a proposed rule change if it finds that it is consistent 
with the requirements of the Exchange Act and the rules and 
regulations thereunder. 15 U.S.C. 78s(b).
    \36\ See 15 U.S.C. 78q-1(b)(3)(F).
    \37\ 15 U.S.C. 78q-1(b)(3)(A), (B) and (F).
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b. Substance of Security-Based Swap Submissions: Quantitative and 
Qualitative Factors
    The Dodd-Frank Act requires the Commission to take into account 
several factors in addition to consistency with Exchange Act Section 
17A in reviewing a clearing agency's Security-Based Swap 
Submission.\38\ The Commission is proposing to require clearing 
agencies to provide information relevant to these factors through the 
proposed amendments to Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4. Specifically, 
clearing agencies would be required to submit quantitative and 
qualitative information to assist the Commission in the consideration 
of the five factors Exchange Act Section 3C requires the Commission to 
take into account in reviewing a Security-Based Swap Submission, which 
include:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \38\ See Public Law 111-203, section 763(a) (adding Exchange Act 
Section 3C(b)(4)(B)(i)-(v)).
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    (i) The existence of significant outstanding notional exposures, 
trading liquidity and adequate pricing data.
    (ii) The availability of a rule framework, capacity, operational 
expertise and resources, and credit support infrastructure to clear the 
contract on terms that are consistent with the material terms and 
trading conventions on which the contact is then traded.
    (iii) The effect on the mitigation of systemic risk, taking into 
account the size of the market for such contract and the resources of 
the clearing agency available to clear the contract.
    (iv) The effect on competition, including appropriate fees and 
charges applied to clearing.
    (v) The existence of reasonable legal certainty in the event of the 
insolvency of the relevant clearing agency or one or

[[Page 82495]]

more of its clearing members with regard to the treatment of customer 
and security-based swap counterparty positions, funds, and 
property.\39\
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    \39\ Proposed Rule 19b-4(o)(3)(ii).
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    Each Security-Based Swap Submission would be required to address 
the factors listed above to the extent they are applicable to the 
security-based swap, the clearing agency and the market.
    For example, in connection with the discussion responsive to factor 
(i) above, the clearing agency could address pricing sources, models 
and procedures demonstrating an ability to obtain price data to measure 
credit exposures in a timely and accurate manner, as well as measures 
of historical market liquidity and trading activity, and expected 
market liquidity and trading activity if the security-based swap is 
required to be cleared (including information on the sources of such 
measures). With respect to the discussion of factor (ii) above, the 
statement describing the availability of a rule framework could include 
a discussion of the rules, policies or procedures applicable to the 
clearing of the relevant security-based swap. Additionally, the 
discussion of credit support infrastructure could include the methods 
to address and communicate requests for, and posting of, collateral. 
With respect to factor (iii) above, the discussion of systemic risk 
could include a statement on the clearing agency's risk management 
procedures, including among other things the measurement and monitoring 
of credit exposures, initial and variation margin methodology, 
methodologies for stress testing and back testing, settlement 
procedures and default management procedures. With respect to factor 
(iv) above, the discussion of fees and charges could address any volume 
incentive programs that may apply or impact the fees and charges. With 
respect to factor (v) above, the discussion could address segregation 
of accounts and all other customer protection measures under 
insolvency.
    In describing the security-based swap, or any group, category, type 
or class of security-based swaps, that a clearing agency plans to 
accept for clearing, the clearing agency could include the relevant 
product specifications, including copies of any standardized legal 
documentation, generally accepted contract terms,\40\ standard 
practices for managing and communicating any life cycle events 
associated with the security-based swap and related adjustments,\41\ 
and the manner in which the information contained in the confirmation 
of the security-based swap trade is transmitted. The clearing agency 
also could discuss its financial and operational capacity to provide 
clearing services to all customers subject to the clearing requirements 
as applicable to the particular security-based swap. Finally, the 
clearing agency could include an analysis of the effect of a clearing 
requirement on the market for the group, category, type, or class of 
security-based swaps, both domestically and globally, including the 
potential effect on market liquidity, trading activity, use of 
security-based swaps by direct and indirect market participants and any 
potential market disruption or benefits. This analysis could include 
whether the members of the clearing agency are operationally and 
financially capable of absorbing clearing business (including indirect 
access market participants) that may result from a determination that 
the security-based swap (or group, category, type or class of security-
based swaps) is required to be cleared.
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    \40\ For example, for some security-based swaps, industry 
standard documentation would include the applicable International 
Swaps and Derivatives Association, Inc. Master Agreement and any 
related asset-class-specific definitions.
    \41\ The Commission has proposed Regulation SBSR, which contains 
a definition of ``life cycle event.'' See Exchange Act Release No. 
63346 (Nov. 19, 2010), 75 FR 75208 (Dec. 2, 2010) (``Regulation 
SBSR--Reporting and Dissemination of Security-Based Swap 
Information'').
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c. Substance of Security-Based Swap Submissions: Open Access
    New Exchange Act Section 3C also requires that the rules of a 
clearing agency that clears security-based swaps subject to the 
clearing requirement provide for open access.\42\ In the course of 
reviewing a Security-Based Swap Submission, the Commission may assess 
whether a clearing agency's rules provide for open access, particularly 
with respect to the relevant Security-Based Swap Submission. 
Accordingly, the proposed rule provides that the Security-Based Swap 
Submission must include a statement regarding how a clearing agency's 
rules:
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    \42\ See Public Law 111-203, section 763(a) (adding Exchange Act 
Section 3C(a)(2) (``[t]he rules of a clearing agency described in 
paragraph (1) shall--(A) prescribe that all security-based swaps 
submitted to the clearing agency with the same terms and conditions 
are economically equivalent within the clearing agency and may be 
offset with each other within the clearing agency; and (B) provide 
for non-discriminatory clearing of a security-based swap executed 
bilaterally or on or through the rules of an unaffiliated national 
securities exchange or security-based swap execution facility.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (i) Prescribe that all security-based swaps submitted to the 
clearing agency with the same terms and conditions are economically 
equivalent within the clearing agency and may be offset with each other 
within the clearing agency; and
    (ii) Provide for non-discriminatory clearing of a security-based 
swap executed bilaterally or on or through the rules of an unaffiliated 
national securities exchange or security-based swap execution 
facility.\43\
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    \43\ Proposed Rule 19b-4(o)(3)(ii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In making a determination, the Commission proposes to take into 
account the factors specified in Exchange Act Section 3C and any 
additional information the Commission determines to be appropriate. The 
proposed rule also requires a clearing agency to provide any additional 
information requested by the Commission as necessary to make a 
determination.\44\ The Commission believes that such a requirement 
would provide appropriate flexibility to facilitate our regulatory 
responsibilities. In making a determination of whether or not the 
clearing requirement would apply to the security-based swap, or any 
group, category, type, or class of security-based swaps, described in 
the submission, the Commission may require such terms and conditions as 
the Commission determines to be appropriate in the public interest.\45\
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    \44\ Proposed Rule 19b-4(o)(6)(i).
    \45\ See Public Law 111-203, section 763(a) (adding Exchange Act 
Section 3C(b)(4)(C)) and Proposed Rule 19b-4(o)(6)(ii).
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d. Timing Related to Security-Based Swap Submissions
    Under Exchange Act Section 3C, as added by Section 763(a) of the 
Dodd-Frank Act, the Commission is required to make its determination of 
whether a security-based swap described in a clearing agency's 
Security-Based Swap Submission is required to be cleared not later than 
90 days after receiving such Security-Based Swap Submission.\46\ The 
90-day determination period may be extended with the consent of the 
clearing agency making such Security-Based Swap Submission.\47\ The 
Commission is required to make available to the public any Security-
Based Swap Submission it receives and to provide at least a 30-day 
public comment period ``regarding its

[[Page 82496]]

determination whether the clearing requirement shall apply to the 
submission.'' \48\ This 30-day comment period enables the public to 
have an opportunity to comment on the Security-Based Swap Submission 
and to provide information for the Commission to consider as part of 
making its determination whether the clearing requirement should apply 
to the submission. Accordingly, the Commission proposes to make the 
Security-Based Swap Submission available for a 30-day public comment 
period within the 90-day determination period. The Commission would 
publish notice of the Security-Based Swap Submission in the Federal 
Register and publish notice on the Commission's publicly-available Web 
site at http://www.sec.gov. Such notice would include the solicitation 
of public comment. This proposed publication process would be 
consistent with the current process that is in place for proposed rule 
changes under Exchange Act Section 19(b)(2) and Rule 19b-4.
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    \46\ See Public Law 111-203, section 763(a) (adding Exchange Act 
Section 3C(b)(3)). Further, pursuant to proposed Rule 19b-4(o)(2), 
if any information submitted to the Commission by a clearing agency 
on Form 19b-4 were not complete or otherwise in compliance with Rule 
19b-4 and Form 19b-4, such information would not be considered a 
Security-Based Swap Submission and the Commission would be required 
to inform the clearing agency within twenty-one business days of 
such submission.
    \47\ See Public Law 111-203, section 763(a) (adding Exchange Act 
Section 3C(b)(3)).
    \48\ See Public Law 111-203, section 763(a) (adding Exchange Act 
Section 3C(b)(2)(C)).
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e. Notice to Clearing Agency Members
    New Exchange Act Section 3C requires that a clearing agency provide 
notice to its members, in a manner determined by the Commission, of its 
Security-Based Swap Submissions.\49\ To meet the requirement of 
providing notice of Security-Based Swap Submissions to members, the 
Commission is proposing amendments to Rule 19b-4 that would require 
clearing agencies to post on their Web sites such submissions to the 
Commission, and any amendments thereto.\50\ This public posting would 
be required to be completed within two business days following the 
Security-Based Swap Submission to the Commission. This timeframe is 
consistent with the notice requirement that currently applies to 
proposed rule changes,\51\ and the Commission believes that such 
timeframe would provide members of the clearing agency and the public 
with timely notice of the submission. The clearing agency would be 
required to maintain such material on its Web site until the Commission 
makes a determination regarding the Security-Based Swap Submission, the 
clearing agency withdraws the Security-Based Swap Submission or the 
clearing agency is notified that the Security-Based Swap Submission is 
not properly filed.\52\ These requirements should help ensure that 
submissions that are being actively considered by the Commission are 
readily available to the members of the clearing agency and the public 
and help provide for a more transparent process.
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    \49\ See Public Law 111-203, section 763(a) (adding Exchange Act 
Section 3C(b)(2)(A)).
    \50\ Proposed Rule 19b-4(o)(5).
    \51\ Commission rules currently require SROs to post on their 
Web sites a copy of any proposed rule change the SRO filed with the 
Commission, and any amendments thereto. Such posting is required 
within two business days after filing the proposed rule change with 
the Commission. See 17 CFR 240.19b-4(l). In adopting this rule, the 
Commission stated that all market participants, investors and other 
interested parties should have access to proposed rule changes filed 
with the Commission, and any amendments, as soon as practicable, and 
that it did not believe that a two-business-day timeframe would be 
impractical or unduly burdensome on SROs. See Securities Exchange 
Act Release No. 50486 (Oct. 4, 2004), 69 FR 60287 (Oct. 8, 2004) 
(Final Rules Regarding Proposed Rule Changes of Self-Regulatory 
Organizations).
    \52\ Proposed Rule 19b-4(o)(5).
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    The Commission notes that the current instructions for Form 19b-4 
require an SRO to file with the Commission copies of notices issued by 
the SRO soliciting comment on the proposed rule change and copies of 
all written comments on the proposed rule change received by the SRO 
(whether or not comments were solicited) from its members or 
participants. Any correspondence the SRO receives after it files a 
proposed rule change, but before the Commission takes final action on 
the proposed rule change, also is required to be filed with the 
Commission.\53\ The SRO is required to summarize the substance of all 
such comments received and respond in detail to any significant issues 
raised in the comments about the proposed rule change.\54\ The 
Commission is proposing that in connection with Security-Based Swap 
Submissions, clearing agencies would be subject to these same 
requirements. The Commission preliminarily believes that its proposal 
to apply such requirements in the instructions to Form 19b-4 to 
Security-Based Swap Submissions would provide the Commission with an 
opportunity to consider the various viewpoints expressed by commenters 
by making sure relevant comments are included in the materials provided 
to the Commission.
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    \53\ See Items 5 and 9 (Exhibit 2) of Form 19b-4. 17 CFR 
240.819.
    \54\ Item 5 of Form 19b-4. 17 CFR 240.819.
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f. Submissions of a Group, Category, Type or Class of Security-Based 
Swaps
    The proposed amendments to Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4 would require 
that clearing agencies submit security-based swaps for review by group, 
category, type, or class to the extent it is practicable and reasonable 
to do so.\55\ Any aggregation would be required to be clearly described 
in a Security-Based Swap Submission so that market participants and the 
public know which security-based swaps may be subject to a clearing 
requirement. The Commission preliminarily believes that including 
multiple security-based swaps in each submission--to the extent that 
such groupings are practicable and reasonable (e.g., by taking into 
consideration appropriate risk management issues applicable to the 
aggregation)--would streamline the submission process for Commission 
staff and the clearing agencies. This in turn would allow more 
security-based swaps to be reviewed in a timely manner.
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    \55\ Proposed Rule 19b-4(o)(4). In its release proposing rules 
to implement Section 723 of the Dodd-Frank Act, the CFTC has 
proposed a similar rule. 75 FR 67277 (November 2, 2010).
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Request for Comments
    The Commission generally requests comments on all aspects of the 
proposed amendments to Rule 19b-4 that would incorporate the process 
for making Security-Based Swap Submissions. In addition, the Commission 
requests comments on the following specific issues:
     Are there specific considerations that the Commission 
should weigh more heavily in reviewing whether a Security-Based Swap 
Submission is consistent with Exchange Act Section 17A? If so, what are 
such considerations?
     Should the information included in this release as 
examples of the kinds of information the clearing agency should include 
in its Security-Based Swap Submission be required in all cases and 
incorporated into the rules?
     To describe the security-based swap, or any group, 
category, type or class of security-based swaps, that a clearing agency 
plans to accept for clearing, should a clearing agency be required to 
include in its Security-Based Swap Submissions specific product 
specifications, including copies of any standardized legal 
documentation, generally accepted contract terms, standard practices 
for managing and communicating any life cycle events associated with 
the security-based swap and related adjustments, and the manner in 
which the information contained in the confirmation of the security-
based swap trade is transmitted? If not, why not? Is there other 
information relating to the description of the security-based swaps 
that clearing agencies should be required to provide? If so, what 
information and why? Should this

[[Page 82497]]

information be required in all cases and incorporated into the rules?
     What specific information should a clearing agency be 
required to include in its Security-Based Swap Submissions regarding 
pricing sources, models and procedures demonstrating an ability to 
obtain price data to measure credit exposures in a timely and accurate 
manner, as well as measures of historical market liquidity and trading 
activity, and expected market liquidity and trading activity if the 
security-based swap is required to be cleared (including information on 
the sources of such measures)? Is there other information relating to 
pricing that clearing agencies should be required to provide? If so, 
what information and why? Should this information be required in all 
cases and incorporated into the rules?
     What specific information should a clearing agency be 
required to include in its Security-Based Swap Submissions pertaining 
to the rules, policies or procedures applicable to the clearing of the 
relevant security-based swap? Is there other information relating to 
rule framework, capacity, operational expertise and resources the 
clearing agency should be required to provide? If so, what information 
and why? Should this information be required in all cases and 
incorporated into the rules?
     Is there specific information a clearing agency should be 
required to include in its Security-Based Swap Submissions regarding 
the methods to address and communicate requests for, and posting of, 
collateral? Is there other information relating to collateral that the 
clearing agency should be required to provide? If so, what information 
and why? Should this information be required in all cases and 
incorporated into the rules?
     What specific information should a clearing agency be 
required to include in its Security-Based Swap Submissions regarding 
the clearing agency's risk management procedures, pertaining to among 
other things the measurement and monitoring of credit exposures, 
initial and variation margin methodology, methodologies for stress 
testing and back testing, settlement procedures and default management 
procedures? Is there other information relating to risk management that 
the clearing agency should be required to provide? If so, what 
information and why? Should this information be required in all cases 
and incorporated into the rules?
     Should a clearing agency, in connection with each 
submission or in some circumstances, be required to include an 
independent validation of its margin methodology and its ability to 
maintain sufficient financial resources? Why or why not, or in which 
circumstances? If independent validation is required, how should the 
Commission assess the independence and technical expertise of the party 
providing the independent validation? What are the critical techniques, 
risk factors and components that should be covered by the model 
validation and why? If the clearing of the security-based swap 
described in the Security-Based Swap Submission would not require a 
change in the clearing agency's margin methodology, do commenters 
believe it would be sufficient for the Commission to permit the 
clearing agency to refer to an applicable independent validation of the 
clearing agency's margin methodology previously provided to the 
Commission with a statement explaining why the existing methodology 
does not require a change in connection with clearing the new security-
based swap and how the current validation is still applicable in the 
context of the security-based swap the clearing agency plans to clear? 
If not, why not?
     What information should a clearing agency be required to 
include in its Security-Based Swap Submissions regarding fees and 
charges and address any volume incentive programs that may apply or 
impact the fees and charges? Is there other information relating to 
fees and charges that the clearing agency should be required to 
provide? If so, what information and why? Should this information be 
required in all cases and incorporated into the rules?
     Should a clearing agency be required to include in its 
Security-Based Swap Submission information regarding segregation of 
accounts and all other customer protection measures under insolvency? 
If not, why not? Is there other information relating to insolvency of 
the clearing agencies' members the clearing agency should be required 
to provide? If so, what information and why? Should this information be 
required in all cases and incorporated into the rules?
     Should a clearing agency be required to include in its 
Security-Based Swap Submission information on whether cross-margining 
is available to the clearing agency's members with respect to their 
positions at other clearing agencies? If not, why not? What types of 
effects on competition are such cross-margining arrangements likely to 
have? Is there any specific information regarding cross-margining 
arrangements that the Commission should collect? If not, why not? If 
so, what information and why? Should this information be required in 
all cases and incorporated into the rules?
     What information should a clearing agency be required to 
include in its Security-Based Swap Submission regarding its financial 
and operational capacity to provide clearing services to all customers 
subject to the clearing requirements as applicable to the particular 
security-based swap? Should this information be required to include an 
analysis of the effect of a clearing requirement on the market for the 
group, category, type, or class of security-based swaps, both 
domestically and globally, including the potential effect on market 
liquidity, trading activity, use of security-based swaps by direct and 
indirect market participants and any potential market disruption or 
benefits? Should it be required to include an analysis of whether the 
members of the clearing agency are operationally and financially 
capable of absorbing clearing business (including indirect access 
market participants) that may result from a determination that the 
security-based swap (or group, category, type or class of security-
based swaps) is required to be cleared? If not, why not? Is there other 
information relating to capacity that the clearing agency should be 
required to provide? If so, what information and why? Should this 
information be required in all cases and incorporated into the rules?
     Is the process for notice to clearing agency members by 
posting on the clearing agency Web site, as proposed by the Commission, 
adequate as a notice mechanism for members? If not, what should change? 
Is the two-day posting requirement appropriate to provide timely notice 
to members? Would a shorter or longer period be appropriate?
     What other method of notice to clearing agency members 
could or should be required rather than Web site posting?
     Should the Commission utilize the proposed rule change 
filing system for Security-Based Swap Submissions? What other methods 
of submitting Security-Based Swap Submissions to the Commission should 
the Commission consider and why?
     What alternatives should the Commission consider to 
requiring clearing agencies to submit security-based swaps for review 
by group, category, type, or class, to the extent it is practicable and 
reasonable to do so?
     Should the Commission consider consolidating multiple 
Security-Based Swap Submissions from one clearing agency into a group, 
category, type, or class of Security-Based Swap Submissions, or 
subdividing a clearing

[[Page 82498]]

agency's submission of a group, category, type, or class of security-
based swaps, as appropriate, for review?
     What information should the clearing agency include in its 
Security-Based Swaps Submissions to identify the scope of the group, 
category, type or class of security-based swaps it plans to clear that 
will provide sufficient parameters to put people on notice that a 
security-based swap may be required to be cleared?
     What characteristics of security-based swaps should be 
common among security-based swaps in order to aggregate them by group, 
category, type or class? Would these characteristics be the same across 
asset classes such as security-based equities derivatives, credit 
derivatives and loan-based swaps? Should the Commission specify those 
attributes in the rule?
     Are there any factors that would make aggregation more 
difficult? Would these be the same or different across asset classes?
     Are there factors that may be clearing-agency specific 
with respect to aggregation? If so, what are those factors?
    As discussed above, Exchange Act Section 3C provides, among other 
things, for a determination by the Commission of whether security-based 
swaps are required to be cleared.\56\ The Commission may determine that 
a security-based swap is required to be cleared based on a review of a 
clearing agency's submission regarding a security-based swap, or any 
group, category, type or class of security-based swaps, that the 
clearing agency plans to accept for clearing (i.e., a Security-Based 
Swap Submission).\57\ Consistent with proposal, if the Commission 
determines that a security-based swap is not required to be cleared, 
such security-based swap may still be cleared on a non-mandatory basis 
by the clearing agency if the clearing agency has rules that permit it 
to clear such security-based swap.\58\ In addition, Exchange Act 
Section 3C(b)(1) provides that ``[t]he Commission on an ongoing basis 
shall review each security-based swap, or any group, category, type, or 
class of security-based swaps to make a determination that such 
security-based swap, or group, category, type, or class of security-
based swaps should be required to be cleared'' (i.e., a Commission-
initiated Review).\59\
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    \56\ See Public Law 111-203, section 763(a) (adding Exchange Act 
Section 3C(a)(1)).
    \57\ See Public Law 111-203, section 763(a) (adding Exchange Act 
Section 3C(b)(2)(C)) (``[t]he Commission shall * * * review each 
submission made under subparagraphs (A) and (B), and determine 
whether the security-based swap, or group, category, type, or class 
of security-based swaps, described in the submission is required to 
be cleared.'').
    \58\ See 15 U.S.C. 78s(b) (proposed rule changes) and 12 U.S.C. 
5465(e) (Advance Notices).
    \59\ See Public Law 111-203, section 763(a) (adding Exchange Act 
Section 3C(b)(1)). The Dodd-Frank Act does not require rulemaking 
with respect to Commission-initiated Reviews.
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    The proposed addition of paragraph (o) to Rule 19b-4 and related 
amendments to Form 19b-4 are intended to provide a process for 
Security-Based Swap Submissions. The Commission is required under the 
Dodd-Frank Act to adopt rules specifying the process for Security-Based 
Swap Submissions. As part of the process of review of each Security-
Based Swap Submission (and in each Commission-initiated Review), the 
Commission must take into account the five factors specified in 
Exchange Act Section 3C(b)(4)(B):
    (i) The existence of significant outstanding notional exposures, 
trading liquidity and adequate pricing data.
    (ii) The availability of a rule framework, capacity, operational 
expertise and resources, and credit support infrastructure to clear the 
contract on terms that are consistent with the material terms and 
trading conventions on which the contract is then traded.
    (iii) The effect on the mitigation of systemic risk, taking into 
account the size of the market for such contract and the resources of 
the clearing agency available to clear the contract.
    (iv) The effect on competition, including appropriate fees and 
charges applied to clearing.
    (v) The existence of reasonable legal certainty in the event of the 
insolvency of the relevant clearing agency or one or more of its 
clearing members with regard to the treatment of customer and security-
based swap counterparty positions, funds, and property.\60\
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    \60\ Proposed Rule 19b-4(o)(3)(ii).
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    Proposed Rule 19b-4(o) and related amendments for Form 19b-4 would 
require clearing agencies to include in their Security-Based Swap 
Submissions information that will assist the Commission in the 
quantitative and qualitative assessment of the statutory factors listed 
above. The proposal also set forth examples of the information clearing 
agencies should include in addressing these five factors.\61\
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    \61\ See Section II.A.1.b for a discussion of the types of 
information that should be included in a Security-Based Swap 
Submission.
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    Promoting clearing is a critical component of the reform mandated 
by the Dodd-Frank Act, which seeks to bring transactions and 
counterparties into a robust, conservative and transparent risk 
management framework.\62\ Exchange Act Section 3C(b)(4)(B) \63\ sets 
forth the factors the Commission is required to take into account in 
determining whether a security-based swap is required to be cleared or 
should be required to be cleared in connection with a Security-Based 
Swap Submission or Commission-initiated Review, respectively. The 
Commission recognizes that in interpreting and applying these factors, 
it should be guided by the general principles underlying the Dodd-Frank 
Act, including in particular the goal of promoting clearing where 
appropriate. At the same time, the Commission is mindful that its 
application of these factors may have a significant effect on the 
market for individual security-based swaps. In addition, an overly 
broad or narrow application of the mandatory clearing requirement could 
undermine the policy objectives of the Dodd-Frank Act. For example, a 
premature determination that a security-based swap is subject to 
mandatory clearing may, in certain circumstances, limit the ability of 
certain market participants to utilize that product (including for risk 
management purposes) which in turn could ultimately result in less 
clearing and more limited use of the security-based swap than might 
otherwise have been the case if it had been permitted to trade without 
being subject to a mandatory clearing requirement for a longer period 
of time.
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    \62\ See Letter from Christopher Dodd, Chairman, Committee on 
Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, United States Senate and 
Blanche Lincoln, Chairman, Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and 
Forestry, United States Senate, to Barney Frank, Chairman, Financial 
Services Committee, United States House of Representatives and 
Collin Peterson, Chairman, Committee on Agriculture, United States 
House of Representatives (June 30, 2010) (on file with the United 
States Senate) (``Congress determined that clearing is at the heart 
of reform--bringing transactions and counterparties into a robust, 
conservative and transparent risk management framework. Congress 
also acknowledged that clearing may not be suitable for every 
transaction or every counterparty. End users who hedge their risks 
may find it challenging to use a standard derivative contract to 
exactly match up their risks with counterparties willing to purchase 
their specific exposures. Standardized derivative contracts may not 
be suitable for every transaction.''). Additionally, and as 
discussed herein in Section II.A.1.a, Exchange Act Section 
3C(b)(4)(A) requires the Commission to review whether a Security-
Based Swap Submission is consistent with Exchange Act Section 17A.
    \63\ See Public Law 111-203, section 763(a) (adding Exchange Act 
Section 3C(b)(4)(B)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    On the other hand, an overly narrow application of the mandatory 
clearing requirement would undermine the potential benefits of 
centralized clearing for counterparties and the marketplace generally 
that Exchange Act Section 3C

[[Page 82499]]

was intended to provide. Moreover, because security-based swaps that 
are subject to the clearing requirement also are required to be 
executed on a national securities exchange or a swap execution facility 
if such an exchange or facility makes the security-based swap available 
to trade, imposing a clearing requirement could have a substantial 
impact generally on the trading environment of the relevant 
instruments, which in turn could affect the relative transparency and 
liquidity of those instruments in ways that may promote, or detract 
from, the overall goals of the Dodd-Frank Act.
    In short, the Commission recognizes, as did Congress, that a 
determination that clearing is required could have ancillary 
consequences. The Dodd-Frank Act includes an exception from the 
mandatory clearing requirement to help address concerns regarding 
circumstances when clearing may not be appropriate.\64\
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    \64\ See S. Rep. No. 111-176 at 34 (stating that ``[s]ome parts 
of the OTC market may not be suitable for clearing and exchange 
trading due to individual business needs of certain users. Those 
users should retain the ability to engage in customized, uncleared 
contracts while bringing in as much of the OTC market under the 
centrally cleared and exchange-traded framework as possible. Also, 
OTC (contracts not cleared centrally) should still be subject to 
reporting, capital, and margin requirements so that regulators have 
the tools to monitor and discourage potentially risky activities, 
except in very narrow circumstances. These exceptions should be 
crafted very narrowly with an understanding that every company, 
regardless of the type of business they are engaged in, has a strong 
commercial incentive to evade regulatory requirements.'').
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    However, because the Commission must still apply the statutory 
factors, in light of the policy goals of the Dodd-Frank Act, to 
determine whether clearing is required, the Commission is seeking 
comment generally on how the factors identified in the statute should 
be applied in making determinations as to whether particular security-
based swaps are or should be required to be cleared.
Request for Comments
     Are there specific considerations that the Commission 
should weigh more heavily in making a determination that a security-
based swap is, or should be, required to be cleared? If so, what are 
such considerations and why should they be given greater weight?
     In a Commission-initiated review, should the Commission 
consider information that is different from the information the 
Commission has proposed for a clearing agency to provide in a Security-
Based Swap Submission to enable the Commission to make a determination 
regarding a clearing requirement? If so, what information should be 
considered and why?
     How should the Commission measure ``significant 
outstanding notional exposures''? Should the Commission consider a 
threshold or a range for what qualifies as ``significant outstanding 
notional exposures''? If so, should this threshold or range vary 
depending on the asset class?
     How should the Commission analyze whether pricing data is 
adequate?
     In taking into account the effect of requiring a security-
based swap (or group, category, type or class of security-based swaps) 
to be cleared on the mitigation of systemic risk, how should the 
Commission evaluate the resources of the clearing agency available to 
clear the security-based swaps?
     In considering the existence of legal certainty in the 
event of the insolvency of the relevant clearing agency or one or more 
of its clearing members, are there specific factors that the Commission 
should take into account? Would seeking information from third-party 
sources such as legal opinions be appropriate? Are there any cross-
border considerations that should be considered?
     How should the Commission analyze the pool of potential 
counterparties to a security-based swap (or group, category, type or 
class of security-based swaps) subject to the clearing requirement?
     How should the Commission analyze the potential effect, 
including the potential effect on liquidity, trading activity, use of 
security-based swaps by direct and indirect market participants and any 
potential disruption or benefit to the market for a security-based swap 
(or group, category, type, or class of security-based swaps) required 
to be cleared?
     Is there information reported to the swap data repository 
that is otherwise not available to the public that a clearing agency 
would require to prepare its Security-Based Swap Submission? If so, 
what information would be required, and why?
2. Prevention of Evasion of the Clearing Requirement.
    Exchange Act Section 3C directs the Commission to prescribe rules 
(and interpretations of rules) the Commission determines to be 
necessary to prevent evasions of the clearing requirements.\65\ The 
term ``clearing agency'' is defined broadly under the Exchange Act,\66\ 
and clearing agencies may offer a spectrum of clearing services. 
Specifically, the Commission has identified the following entities and 
activities as falling within the definition of clearing agency: (i) 
Clearing corporations; (ii) securities depositories; and (iii) matching 
services.\67\ As a result, there may be entities that operate as 
registered clearing agencies for security-based swaps that do not 
provide central clearing and act as a CCP. The Commission preliminarily 
believes that the broad definition of the term ``clearing agency'' 
could be used by market participants to evade the clearing requirement 
of Exchange Act Section 3C(a)(1), which states that ``[i]t shall be 
unlawful for any person to engage in a security-based swap unless that 
person submits such security-based swap for clearing to a clearing 
agency that is registered under this Act or a clearing agency that is 
exempt from registration under this Act if the security-based swap is 
required to be cleared.'' \68\ For example, market participants seeking 
to evade the requirement to clear a security-based swap set forth in 
Exchange Act Section 3C(a)(1) could submit the security-based swap for 
matching services (rather than for central clearing) to a clearing 
agency that is either registered with the Commission or exempt from 
registration under the Exchange Act.
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    \65\ See Public Law 111-203, section 763(a) (adding Exchange Act 
Section 3C(d)(1), which states that ``[t]he Commission shall 
prescribe rules under this section (and issue interpretations of 
rules prescribed under this section), as determined by the 
Commission to be necessary to prevent evasions of the mandatory 
clearing requirements under this Act.'').
    \66\ See supra note 11 discussing the definition of ``clearing 
agency'' pursuant to Exchange Act Section 3(a)(23)).
    \67\ See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. No. 20221 (Sept. 
23, 1983), 48 FR 45167 (October 3, 1983), (Order Approving the 
Clearing Agency Registration of Four Depositories and Four Clearing 
Corporations) and 39829 (April 6, 1998), 63 FR 17943 (April 13, 
1998) (Confirmation and Affirmation of Securities Trades; Matching).
    \68\ See Public Law 111-203, section 763(a) (adding Exchange Act 
Section 3C(a)(1)).
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    The Commission preliminarily believes that other types of clearing 
functions and services offered by clearing agencies would not achieve 
the goal of central clearing contemplated under the Dodd-Frank Act--
improving the management of counterparty risk.\69\ The Commission 
preliminarily believes

[[Page 82500]]

that proposed Rule 3Ca-2 would prevent potential evasions of the 
clearing requirement by requiring market participants to submit 
security-based swaps to a clearing agency for central clearing as 
opposed to other clearing functions or services. Accordingly, proposed 
Rule 3Ca-2 would clarify the reference to ``submits such security-based 
swap for clearing to a clearing agency'' in Exchange Act Section 
3C(a)(1) to mean that the security-based swap must be submitted for 
central clearing to a clearing agency that functions as a CCP.\70\ 
Submission to a clearing agency for clearing services other than 
central clearing as a CCP would not meet the clearing requirement.
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    \69\ The Commission has identified the following entities and 
activities as falling within the definition of clearing agency: (i) 
Clearing corporations; (ii) securities depositories; and (iii) 
matching services. Structured and operated appropriately, CCPs may 
improve the management of counterparty risk and may provide 
additional benefits such as multilateral netting of trades. See 
supra note 67 and Section I.A.
    \70\ Proposed Rule 3Ca-2. The definitional section of the 
Exchange Act provides that defined terms may have different meanings 
in different contexts. See Exchange Act Section 3(a) (``When used in 
this title, unless the context otherwise requires * * * .''). 15 
U.S.C. 78c(a).
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Request for Comments
    The Commission generally requests comments on all aspects of 
proposed Rule 3Ca-2. In addition, the Commission requests comments on 
the following specific issues:
     Should the Commission require security-based swaps to be 
submitted for central clearing to a clearing agency that acts as a CCP 
to meet the clearing requirement?
     Are there clearing agency functions or services that are 
not CCP functions performed by a clearing agency but that may provide 
comparable benefits to those of a CCP? If so, please identify such 
functions or services and the benefits they provide.

B. Stay of the Clearing Requirement and Review by the Commission

    Exchange Act Section 3C states that, after making a determination 
that a security-based swap (or group, category, type or class of 
security-based swaps) is required to be cleared, the Commission, on 
application of a counterparty to a security-based swap or on the 
Commission's own initiative, may stay the clearing requirement until 
the Commission completes a review of the terms of the security-based 
swap and the clearing arrangement.\71\ In connection with a stay of the 
clearing requirement and subsequent review of the terms of the 
security-based swap and the clearing arrangement, the Commission is 
required to adopt rules for reviewing a clearing agency's clearing of a 
security-based swap, or any group, category, type or class of security-
based swaps, that the clearing agency has accepted for clearing.\72\ 
Proposed Rule 3Ca-1 would establish a procedure for staying the 
clearing requirement and the Commission's subsequent review of the 
terms of the security-based swap and the clearing arrangement.
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    \71\ See Public Law 111-203, section 763(a) (adding Exchange Act 
Section 3C(c)(1)).
    \72\ See Public Law 111-203, section 763(a) (adding Exchange Act 
Section 3C(c)(4)).
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    Under proposed Rule 3Ca-1, a counterparty to a security-based swap 
subject to the clearing requirement wishing to apply for a stay of the 
clearing requirement would be required to submit a written statement to 
the Commission that includes (i) a request for a stay of the clearing 
requirement, (ii) the identity of the counterparties to the security-
based swap and a contact at the counterparty requesting the stay, (iii) 
the identity of the clearing agency clearing the security-based swap, 
(iv) the terms of the security-based swap subject to the clearing 
requirement and a description of the clearing arrangement and (v) the 
reasons a stay should be granted and the security-based swap should not 
be subject to a clearing requirement, specifically addressing the same 
factors a clearing agency must address in its Security-Based-Swap 
Submission pursuant to proposed Rule 19b-4(o).\73\ The Commission 
preliminarily believes that such information would assist the 
Commission in determining whether to grant the stay. Under proposed 
Rule 3Ca-1, the counterparty's statement to the Commission requesting 
the stay of the clearing requirement would be made available to the 
public on the Commission's Web site in order to provide the public with 
notice of the submission of the stay. A stay of the clearing 
requirement may be applicable to the counterparty requesting the stay 
or more broadly, to the security-based swap, or any group, category, 
type or class of security-based swaps, subject to the clearing 
requirement. The Commission would provide notice to the public 
regarding a stay of the clearing requirement that is generally 
applicable.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \73\ Proposed Rule 3Ca-1(b).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Pursuant to Exchange Act Section 3C, in undertaking its review of 
the clearing requirement subsequent to granting a stay, the Commission 
would consider the clearing agency's clearing of the security-based 
swap (or group, category, type of class of security-based swaps) for 
consistency with the determination criteria under Exchange Act Section 
3C(b)(4).\74\ The Commission also may take into consideration the 
clearing agency's rules for open access as related to the security-
based swap (or group, category, type or class of security-based swaps) 
subject to review.\75\ The Commission may determine that it requires 
additional information in the possession of the clearing agency (as 
distinguished from the information it received from the counterparty). 
Accordingly, proposed Rule 3Ca-1 requires the application for the stay 
to identify the clearing agency that is clearing the security-based 
swap \76\ and also requires that any clearing agency that has accepted 
for clearing the security-based swap, or any group, category, type or 
class of security-based swaps, subject to the stay, provide information 
requested by the Commission in the course of its review during the 
stay.\77\ Exchange Act Section 3C also requires the Commission to 
complete such clearing review not later than 90 days after issuance of 
the stay, unless the clearing agency that clears the security-based 
swap agrees to an extension of the time limit.\78\
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    \74\ See Public Law 111-203, section 763(a) (adding Exchange Act 
Section 3C(c)(3)(A)).
    \75\ See Public Law 111-203, section 763(a) (adding Exchange Act 
Section 3C(a)(2)).
    \76\ Proposed Rule 3Ca-1(b)(3).
    \77\ Proposed Rule 3Ca-1(d).
    \78\ See Public Law 111-203, section 763(a) (adding Exchange Act 
Section 3C(c)(2)).
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    Proposed Rule 3Ca-1 provides that, upon completion of its review, 
the Commission may determine unconditionally, or subject to such terms 
and conditions as the Commission determines to be appropriate in the 
public interest, that the security-based swap (or group, category, type 
or class of security-based swaps) must be cleared.\79\ Alternatively, 
the Commission may determine that the clearing requirement does not 
apply to the security-based swap (or group, category, type or class of 
security-based swaps).\80\ If the Commission were to make a 
determination that the clearing requirement does not apply to a 
security-based swap (or group, category, type or class of security-
based swaps), the proposed rule makes clear that clearing may continue 
on a non-mandatory basis.\81\ As previously noted, moving security-
based swaps into clearing in a gradual manner through non-mandatory 
clearing may in certain circumstances be appropriate. For example, a 
premature determination that a product is subject to mandatory clearing 
may, in certain circumstances,

[[Page 82501]]

limit the ability of certain market participants to utilize that 
product (including for risk management purposes) which in turn could 
ultimately result in less clearing and more limited use of the product 
than might otherwise have been the case if it had been permitted to 
trade without being subject to a mandatory clearing requirement for a 
longer period of time.
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    \79\ Proposed Rule 3Ca-1(e)(1) and Public Law 111-203, section 
763(a) (adding Exchange Act Section 3C(c)(3)(A)).
    \80\ Proposed Rule 3Ca-1(e)(2) and Public Law 111-203, section 
763(a) (adding Exchange Act Section 3C(c)(3)(B)).
    \81\ See proposed Rule 3Ca-1(e)(2).
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Request for Comments
    The Commission generally requests comments on all aspects of 
proposed Rule 3Ca-1. In addition, the Commission requests comments on 
the following specific issues:
     Does the proposal provide sufficient guidance regarding 
the process for a stay? Are there any alternative approaches the 
Commission should consider?
     Should the Commission require a counterparty applying for 
a stay to provide information that is broader or in addition to the 
information the Commission has proposed? If so, what information should 
be added to the requirement?
     Should the informational requirement imposed on a 
counterparty applying for a stay be narrower than that which the 
Commission has proposed? If so, what information should be eliminated 
from the requirement?
     Are there any terms or conditions that the Commission 
should generally consider imposing as part of a stay?
     Under what circumstances would it be reasonable for the 
Commission to determine that clearing is not required after making an 
initial determination that clearing is required?
     Should a Commission determination to allow clearing of a 
securities-based swap on a non-mandatory basis be subject to ongoing 
review or limited by a certain timeframe? What type of timeframe may be 
appropriate?

C. Title VIII Notice Filing Requirements for Designated Clearing 
Agencies

    The Commission is proposing to add a new paragraph (n) to Rule 19b-
4 to implement the filing requirement in Section 806(e). New paragraph 
(n) would require that an Advance Notice be submitted to the Commission 
electronically on Form 19b-4. In addition, new paragraph (n) would 
define when a proposed change to a clearing agency's rules, procedures 
or operations could materially affect the nature or level of risks 
presented by the designated financial market utility. This definition 
would determine when an Advance Notice under Section 806(e) must be 
filed with the Commission. The Commission also is proposing 
corresponding amendments to Form 19b-4 as discussed in more detail in 
Section II.D.
    As with Security-Based Swap Submissions filed pursuant to Exchange 
Act Section 3C, the Commission anticipates that in many cases a 
proposed change may be required to be filed as an Advance Notice under 
Section 806(e) and as a proposed rule change under Exchange Act Section 
19(b).\82\ This is because a proposal that qualifies as a proposed 
change to a rule, procedure or operation that materially affects the 
nature or level of risk presented by the designated clearing agency 
under Section 806(e) may also qualify as a proposed rule change under 
Exchange Act Section 19(b). As a result, a designated clearing agency 
may be required to file a proposal as an Advance Notice and as a 
proposed rule change. Designated clearing agencies, as SROs, will 
already be required to file proposed rule changes on Form 19b-4 using 
EFFS.\83\ Accordingly, and similar to the proposal for Security-Based 
Swap Submissions, the Commission is proposing to require clearing 
agencies to use the existing filing system, EFFS, and Form 19b-4 for 
the filing of Advance Notices under Section 806(e). This would allow 
designated clearing agencies to comply with the notice requirement in 
Section 806(e) using the same system they use for submitting proposed 
rule changes under Exchange Act Section 19(b) and, as applicable, 
Security-Based Swap Submissions under Exchange Act Section 3C. 
Leveraging the existing filing system, EFFS, for the submission of 
Advance Notices is intended to utilize efficiently Commission and 
designated clearing agency resources.
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    \82\ If the proposed change is related to clearing a type, 
group, class, or category of security-based swap, it may also be 
required to be filed as a Security-Based Swap Submission under 
Exchange Act Section 3C.
    \83\ As discussed below in Section I.F., the processes under 
Exchange Act Section 19(b) and Section 806(e) may not always 
overlap. For example, certain changes to the operations of a 
designated clearing agency may not require a rule filing under 
Exchange Act Section 19(b), which does not specifically apply to 
changes in operations. Such changes may, however, trigger a 
requirement to file an Advance Notice if they would materially 
affect the nature or level of risks presented by the designated 
clearing agency. Nevertheless, the two processes are sufficiently 
similar as to warrant using the same method for filing.
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1. Standards for Determining When Advance Notice Is Required
    Section 806(e)(1)(A) requires a designated financial market utility 
to provide 60 days advance notice to its Supervisory Agency of any 
proposed change to its rules, procedures or operations that could 
materially affect the nature or level of risks presented by the 
designated financial market utility.\84\ The Commission is proposing 
that for purposes of this requirement, the phrase ``materially affect 
the nature or level of risks presented'' \85\ would be defined to mean 
the existence of a reasonable possibility that the change could affect 
the performance of essential clearing and settlement functions or the 
overall nature or level of risk presented by the designated clearing 
agency.\86\ The proposed definition is designed to include all changes 
that would affect the risk management functions performed by the 
clearing agency that are related to systemic risk, as well as changes 
that could affect the clearing agency's ability to continue to perform 
its core clearance and settlement functions.\87\
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    \84\ 12 U.S.C. 5465(e)(1)(A).
    \85\ Id.
    \86\ Proposed Rule 19b-4(n)(2)(i).
    \87\ Core clearance and settlement functions may include, but 
are not limited to, the processing, comparison, netting, or 
guaranteeing of securities transactions as well as any processes or 
procedures, such as internal risk management controls, that support 
these functions.
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    In order to help designated clearing agencies determine whether an 
Advance Notice is required, the Commission is proposing to include in 
the rule a list of categories of changes to rules, procedures or 
operations that the Commission preliminarily believes could materially 
affect the nature or level of risks presented by a designated clearing 
agency. The proposed list of such changes may include, but are not 
limited to, changes that materially affect participant and product 
eligibility, daily or intraday settlement procedures, default 
procedures, system safeguards, governance or financial resources of the 
designated clearing agency, or otherwise generally affect risk 
management processes or capabilities.\88\ The Commission preliminarily 
believes that changes in these areas pertain to core functions of a 
clearing agency and, as a result, may affect the ability of a 
designated clearing agency to manage its risks appropriately and to 
continue to conduct systemically important clearance and settlement 
services. For example, participant and product eligibility requirements 
of a designated clearing agency are designed to ensure that the 
clearing agency's members have sufficient financial resources and 
operational capacity to meet obligations arising from participation in 
the clearing agency, and to ensure that the products cleared by the 
clearing agency are

[[Page 82502]]

sufficiently liquid and adequate pricing data is available. In 
addition, a designated clearing agency's default procedures exist to 
ensure that, should a default occur, the clearing agency has the 
financial resources, liquidity and operational abilities to continue to 
make payments to non-defaulting participants on time. Additional 
examples of the types of matters that would fall within the categories 
listed above include changes to the methods for making margin 
calculations, liquidity arrangements and significant new services of 
the clearing agency.
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    \88\ Proposed Rule 19b-4(n)(2)(ii).
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    Moreover, while a broad interpretation of the materiality threshold 
is consistent with the underlying principles of Title VIII and 
desirable to permit a review of all matters that impact the risks 
presented by clearing agencies, not every change to a designated 
clearing agency's rules, procedures or operations will be material. 
Accordingly, the Commission has included two broad categories of 
examples in the proposed rule of changes to rules, procedures or 
operations that the Commission preliminarily believes would not 
materially affect the nature or level or risks presented by a 
designated clearing agency and therefore, would not require the filing 
of an Advance Notice. The first category includes, but is not limited 
to, changes to an existing procedure, control, or service that do not 
modify the rights or obligations of the designated financial market 
utility or persons using its payment, clearing, or settlement services 
and that do not adversely affect the safeguarding of securities, 
collateral, or funds in the custody or control of the designated 
financial market utility or for which it is responsible. The second 
category includes, but is not limited to, changes concerned solely with 
the administration of the designated clearing agency or related to the 
routine, daily administration, direction and control of employees.\89\
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    \89\ Proposed Rule 19b-4(n)(2)(iii).
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    The Commission preliminarily believes that the proposed definition 
of ``materially affect the nature or level of risks presented'' 
provides sufficient information for designated clearing agencies to 
know when advance notice under Section 806(e) is required while 
allowing flexibility to capture all relevant proposed changes as 
specific circumstances warrant. However, as this would be a new 
requirement, the Commission expects that designated clearing agencies 
may discuss, at least initially, proposed changes with Commission staff 
prior to determining if advance notice under Section 806(e) is required 
to be filed with respect to a proposed change to the clearing agency's 
rules, procedures or operations.
2. Providing Notice of the Matters Included in an Advance Notice to the 
Board and Interested Persons
    Given the role of clearing agencies in supporting financial 
markets, the Commission recognizes that members of the public may have 
an interest in proposed changes to the rules, procedures or operations 
of systemically important clearing agencies. Accordingly, new paragraph 
(n) of Rule 19b-4 would provide that, upon the filing of any Advance 
Notice by a designated clearing agency, the Commission would publish 
notice thereof in the Federal Register, together with the terms of the 
substance of the proposed change to the rules, procedures, or 
operations of the designated clearing agency and a description of the 
subjects and issues involved.\90\ This requirement is consistent with 
the existing procedures for proposed rule changes under Exchange Act 
Section 19(b) and the proposed procedures for Security-Based Swap 
Submissions under Exchange Act Section 3C. In addition, the Commission 
is proposing that designated clearing agencies post Advance Notices and 
any amendments thereto on their Web sites within two business days of 
filing the notice or amendments in order to ensure that interested 
parties have timely and transparent access to the matters discussed 
therein, particularly in circumstances where a proposed change is not 
required to be filed under Exchange Act Section 19(b) and, as a result, 
would not otherwise be published for comment.\91\ Consistent with the 
use and proposed use of Form 19b-4, the purpose of this proposed rule 
would be to allow the Commission to give interested persons an 
opportunity to review and to submit written data, views and arguments 
concerning the matters referred to in the Advance Notice.\92\ Comments 
and other information received would be considered by the Commission in 
determining whether to object to an Advance Notice.
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    \90\ Proposed Rule 19b-4(n)(1).
    \91\ Proposed Rule 19b-4(n)(3).
    \92\ Under the Commission's current practice with respect to 
Exchange Act Section 19(b), proposed rule changes are generally 
published with a twenty-one day comment period. The Commission 
expects that Advance Notices will be published for the same comment 
period.
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    Section 806(e)(3) requires that the Commission provide the Board 
with a complete copy of any information it receives in connection with 
the Advance Notice.\93\ To satisfy this requirement, new paragraph (n) 
would require a designated clearing agency to provide to the Board 
copies of all materials submitted to the Commission relating to an 
Advance Notice contemporaneously with such submission to the 
Commission.\94\ Such copies would be provided to the Board in 
triplicate and in hard copy format, pursuant to proposed changes to the 
instructions of Form 19b-4.
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    \93\ 12 U.S.C. 5465(e)(3). In addition, the Commission is 
required to provide the Board with any information it issues or 
submits in connection therewith.
    \94\ Proposed Rule 19b-4(n)(5).
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    The Commission also is proposing that a designated clearing agency 
be required to post a notice on its Web site that the proposed change 
described in an Advance Notice has been permitted to take effect within 
two business days of such date as determined in accordance with the 
timeframe set forth in Section 806(e).\95\ The purpose of this proposed 
rule is to provide a means for public notice when a proposed change 
under Title VIII is permitted to become effective, since the Commission 
will not affirmatively approve an Advance Notice under Section 806(e)--
i.e., it will not issue a public order granting approval as it does 
with proposed rule changes under Exchange Act Section 19(b). As a 
result, there will not be a Commission action to indicate when an 
Advance Notice has been permitted to take effect. Moreover, the 
designated clearing agency also would be required to post notice on its 
Web site of the time at which the proposed change becomes effective if 
that date is different from the date on which the proposed change is 
permitted to become effective. To be consistent with the notice 
requirements applicable to proposed rule changes under Exchange Act 
Section 19(b) and to give interested parties timely notice of the 
change, this notice would be required to be posted within two business 
days of the effective date.\96\ Once the notice of the effectiveness of 
the proposed change has been posted, the designated clearing agency 
would be permitted to remove its original posting of the Advance Notice 
and any amendments thereto from its Web site. A designated clearing 
agency also could remove the Advance Notice from its Web site if it 
withdrew the notice or if it was notified that such notice was not 
properly filed.\97\
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    \95\ Proposed Rule 19b-4(n)(4)(i).
    \96\ Proposed Rule 19b-4(n)(4)(ii).
    \97\ Proposed Rule 19b-4(n)(3).

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[[Page 82503]]

3. Timing and Determination of Advance Notices Pursuant to Section 
806(e)
    Section 806(e) does not require the Commission to approve 
affirmatively a proposed change referred to in the Advance Notice; 
however, Section 806(e) requires that the Commission notify the 
designated clearing agency of any objection to the proposed change. 
Section 806(e)(1)(E) provides that an objection must be made within 60 
days of the Commission's receipt of the Advance Notice, unless the 
Commission requests additional information in consideration of the 
notice, in which case the 60-day period will recommence on the date 
such information is received by the Commission.\98\ Additionally, 
pursuant to Section 806(e)(1)(H), the Commission may extend the review 
period for an additional 60 days for proposed changes that raise novel 
or complex issues, subject to the Commission providing the designated 
clearing agency with prompt written notice of the extension.\99\ 
Finally, Section 806(e)(4) requires that the Commission consult with 
the Board before taking any action on, or completing its review of, the 
change referred to in the Advance Notice.\100\ The timeframes set forth 
in Section 806(e) determine when a proposed change to a designated 
clearing agency's rules, procedures or operations will become 
effective, and the Commission is not proposing any rules related to 
these timeframes.
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    \98\ 12 U.S.C. 5465(e)(1)(E).
    \99\ 12 U.S.C. 5465(e)(1)(H).
    \100\ 12 U.S.C. 5465(e)(4).
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4. Implementation of Proposed Changes and Emergency Changes Pursuant to 
Section 806(e)
    Section 806(e)(1)(F) provides generally that a designated clearing 
agency may not implement a proposed change filed as an Advance Notice 
if the Commission notifies it of an objection during the applicable 
review period.\101\ Section 806(e), however, provides two exceptions to 
this prohibition. First, Section 806(e)(1)(I) permits the designated 
clearing agency to implement a change before the 60-day review period 
(or such longer period as extended in accordance with the statute) 
expires if the Commission notifies the designated clearing agency in 
writing that it does not object to the proposed change to the 
designated clearing agency's rules, procedures or operations and 
authorizes the designated clearing agency to implement the change on an 
earlier date, subject to any conditions imposed by the Commission.\102\ 
As noted above, however, before taking any action on, or completing its 
review of, a change proposed by a designated clearing agency in an 
Advance Notice, the Commission is required to consult with the 
Board.\103\
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    \101\ 12 U.S.C. 5465(e)(1)(F).
    \102\ 12 U.S.C. 5465(e)(1)(I).
    \103\ 12 U.S.C. 5465(e)(4).
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    Second, Section 806(e)(2) allows a designated clearing agency to 
implement a change that would otherwise require providing an Advance 
Notice if it determines that (i) an emergency exists and (ii) immediate 
implementation of the change is necessary for the designated clearing 
agency to continue to provide its services in a safe and sound 
manner.\104\ If a designated clearing agency determines to implement an 
emergency change, it must provide notice to the Commission as soon as 
practicable, and in no event later than 24 hours after implementation 
of the relevant change.\105\ Such emergency notice must contain all of 
the information otherwise required to be in an Advance Notice as well 
as a description of (i) the nature of the emergency and (ii) the reason 
the change was necessary in order for the designated clearing agency to 
continue to provide its services in a safe and sound manner.\106\ In 
reviewing the emergency notice, the Commission may require modification 
or rescission of the relevant change if it determines that the change 
is not consistent with the purposes of Title VIII, including all 
applicable rules, orders, or the risk management standards prescribed 
under Section 805(a) of Title VIII.\107\ The procedures for 
implementing a proposed change to a designated clearing agency's rules, 
procedures or operations before the expiration of the standard review 
period or on an emergency basis are set forth in Section 806(e). The 
Commission is not proposing any rules related to these implementation 
procedures.
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    \104\ 12 U.S.C. 5465(e)(2)(A).
    \105\ 12 U.S.C. 5465(e)(2)(B).
    \106\ 12 U.S.C. 5465(e)(2)(C).
    \107\ 12 U.S.C. 5465(e)(2)(D). Pursuant to Section 806(e)(3), 
the Commission is required to provide the Board concurrently with a 
complete copy of any notice, request or other information it 
receives. However, the Commission is proposing that the designated 
clearing agency file copies of any such notice, requests or other 
information with the Board in order to help meet this requirement.
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Request for Comments
    The Commission generally requests comments on all aspects of the 
proposed amendments to Rule 19b-4 to incorporate the process for 
designated clearing agencies to file Advance Notices with the 
Commission pursuant to Section 806(e). In addition, the Commission 
requests comments on the following specific issues:
     Do the proposed rules sufficiently define and describe 
when advance notice of proposed changes to rules, procedures or 
operations are required to be filed by designated financial market 
utilities in accordance with Section 806(e)?
     Is the proposed definition for the term ``materially 
affect the nature or level of risks presented'' by a designated 
clearing agency broad enough to capture all types of changes that could 
materially affect the nature or level of risks presented by a 
designated clearing agency? Alternatively, should the definition 
include a greater degree of specificity regarding the proposed changes 
that must be filed as Advance Notices with the Commission?
     Should additional examples be provided regarding the 
categories of changes that may materially affect the nature or level of 
risks presented by a designated clearing agency and, as a result, would 
be required to be filed with the Commission under Section 806(e)? 
Should additional examples be provided regarding the categories of 
changes that may not materially affect the nature or level of risks 
presented by a designated clearing agency and, as a result, would not 
be required to be filed with the Commission under Section 806(e)? If 
so, what additional examples should be provided?
     Should the Commission utilize the proposed rule change 
filing system under Rule 19b-4 for Advance Notices required to be filed 
by designated clearing agencies under Section 806(e)? Do commenters 
have suggestions for other methods of filing Advance Notices with the 
Commission?
     Should the Commission specify any additional requirements 
to those already in Section 806(e) with respect to Advance Notices 
implemented on an emergency basis? If so, please specify such 
requirements. Is the proposed rule's requirement for proposed changes 
implemented on an emergency basis too onerous? If so, please specify 
changes that should be made.
     Is there any specific additional information that should 
be included in the Advance Notice filing requirement regarding the 
nature or level of risks presented by the designated clearing agency?

D. Amendments to Form 19b-4

    In conjunction with the proposed Rule 19b-4 amendments, the 
Commission is proposing to amend Form 19b-4 to include Security-Based 
Swap Submissions and Advance

[[Page 82504]]

Notices. Specifically, the Commission is proposing to amend the cover 
page of Form 19b-4 to add additional checkboxes so that a clearing 
agency may indicate that the filing is being submitted as a Security-
Based Swap Submission or an Advance Notice (in the case of a designated 
clearing agency) as well as a proposed rule change under Exchange Act 
Section 19(b). A clearing agency would be able to select more than one 
filing type, check the appropriate box or boxes to indicate the filing 
type and submit all related information as a single filing. In other 
words, in cases where a proposed change must be filed pursuant to more 
than one filing requirement, the clearing agency would be able to meet 
all applicable filing requirements by submitting a single Form 19b-4 
electronically on the existing filing system, EFFS, to the Commission.
    The Commission also is proposing to amend the General Instructions 
for Form 19b-4 regarding the filing requirements for Security-Based 
Swap Submissions and Advance Notices. The Commission is proposing to 
amend the instructions to include specific information that is required 
to be filed as part of a Security-Based Swap Submission or an Advance 
Notice.
    With respect to Security-Based Swap Submissions, the proposed 
amendments to the Form 19b-4 General Instructions would require 
clearing agencies to include a statement that includes, but is not 
limited to: (i) How the submission is consistent with Exchange Act 
Section 17A; (ii) information that will assist the Commission in the 
quantitative and qualitative assessment of the factors specified in 
Exchange Act Section 3C; and (iii) how the rules of the clearing agency 
meet the criteria for open access. Additionally, in order to facilitate 
the Commission's review of a Security-Based Swap Submission, the 
proposed instructions provide examples of the types of information the 
clearing agency should provide relating to product specifications; 
pricing sources, models and procedures; risk management procedures; 
measures of market liquidity and trading activity; credit support; the 
effect of a clearing requirement on the market for the swap; applicable 
rules, policies, or procedures; terms and trading conventions on which 
the swap is currently traded; and financial and operational capacity.
    With respect to Advance Notices, the proposed amendments to the 
Form 19b-4 General Instructions would require the designated clearing 
agency to provide a description of the nature of the proposed change 
and the expected effects on risks to the designated clearing agency, 
its participants, or the market and it must provide a description of 
how the designated clearing agency will manage any identified risks. A 
designated clearing agency also would be instructed to provide any 
additional information requested by the Commission necessary to assess 
the effect the proposed change would have on the nature or level of 
risks associated with the designated clearing agency's payment, 
clearing or settlement activities and the sufficiency of any proposed 
risk management techniques.
    The Commission is proposing to provide a new Exhibit 1A to the 
General Instructions for the Federal Register notice template used by 
clearing agencies as an exhibit to the Form 19b-4 filing. New Exhibit 
1A would be used only by clearing agencies. All other SROs would 
continue to use the current Exhibit 1 to prepare the Federal Register 
notice for proposed rule changes. The Commission is proposing a 
separate exhibit for clearing agencies because the proposed rule to 
require notice of Security-Based Swap Submissions and Advance Notices 
to be published in the Federal Register would apply only to clearing 
agencies. Instructions on preparing a Federal Register notice for 
Security-Based Swap Submissions and Advance Notices would be 
unnecessary for all other SROs. In order to avoid any confusion, the 
Commission is proposing to provide clearing agencies with Exhibit 1A to 
use to prepare a Federal Register notice for a proposed rule change, 
Security-Based Swap Submission, or Advance Notice, or any combination 
of the three. The proposed amendments to the General Instructions for 
Form 19b-4 also would incorporate the statutory timeframes and other 
procedural requirements that are in Exchange Act Section 3C and Section 
806(e).
    Moreover, pursuant to existing Rule 19b-4(j), SROs are required to 
sign Form 19b-4 electronically in connection with filing a proposed 
rule change and to retain a copy of the signature page in accordance 
with Rule 17a-1. Under the proposed rules, Rule 19b-4(j) would be 
modified such that it would apply also to Security-Based Swap 
Submissions filed in accordance with Exchange Act Section 3C and 
Advance Notices filed in accordance with Section 806(e).
    In addition, the proposed changes to the General Instructions for 
Form 19b-4 would reflect the new deadlines by which the Commission must 
publish and act upon proposed rule changes submitted by SROs and the 
new standards for approval, disapproval or suspension of proposed rule 
changes pursuant to the amendments to Exchange Act Section 19(b) 
contained in Section 916 of the Dodd-Frank Act. The Commission is 
proposing a number of technical and clarifying amendments to Rule 19b-4 
and Form 19b-4 to make the instructions consistent with the new 
requirements in Section 916 of the Dodd-Frank Act and with current 
practices of SRO filers.\108\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \108\ See proposed amendments to the General Instructions for 
Form 19b-4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Section 916 of the Dodd-Frank Act also modified Exchange Act 
Section 19(b)(3)(A), which permits certain types of proposed rule 
changes to take effect immediately upon filing with the Commission and 
without the notice and approval procedures required by Exchange Act 
Section 19(b)(2), to make clear that any rule establishing or changing 
a fee, due or other charge imposed by the SRO qualifies for this 
designation, regardless of whether the fee, due or other charge is 
applicable only to a member.\109\ The General Instructions for Form 
19b-4 have been modified to reflect this clarification.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \109\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Commission requests comment on all aspects of the proposed 
amendments to Form 19b-4. In addition, the Commission requests comments 
on the following specific issues:
     Do the proposed amendments to Form 19b-4 adequately 
capture the filing requirements in Exchange Act Section 3C and Section 
806(e) while allowing clearing agencies to meet the requirements for 
filing notice of proposed rule changes under Exchange Act Section 
19(b)? If not, why not?
     Would additional changes to Rule 19b-4 or Form 19b-4 be 
useful in order to accommodate the filing of Advance Notices under 
Section 806(e)? If so, what specific changes should the Commission 
consider?

E. Amendments to Rule 19b-4 Relating to Section 916 of the Dodd-Frank 
Act

    Under Exchange Act Section 19(b)(2)(E),\110\ as amended by the 
Dodd-Frank Act, the Commission is required to send the SRO notice to 
the Federal Register for publication thereof within 15 days of the date 
on which the SRO's Web site publication is made. The Commission is 
proposing to amend Rule 19b-4 to provide that if a SRO does not post a 
proposed rule change on its Web site on the same day that it files the 
proposal with the Commission, then the SRO shall inform the Commission 
of the date on which it posted such proposal on its Web site. The 
purpose of this

[[Page 82505]]

change is to advise the Commission of the date the SRO posted the 
proposed rule change filing to its Web site, as such posting initiates 
the timing for the requirement of the Commission to send notice of the 
proposed rule change to the Federal Register.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \110\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2)(E).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Commission requests comment on all aspects of the proposed 
amendments to Rule 19b-4 relating to Section 916 of the Dodd-Frank Act. 
In addition, the Commission requests comments on the following specific 
issues:
     Should the Commission specify the manner and form by which 
the SRO should inform the Commission of the date on which it posted the 
proposed rule change on its Web site? If so, what manner and form 
should the notification take?

F. New Requirements Under Exchange Act Section 3C and Section 806(e) 
and the Existing Filing Requirement in Exchange Act Section 19(b)

    The proposed amendments to Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4 incorporate 
two new requirements under the Dodd-Frank Act that are similar to the 
existing filing requirement for proposed rule changes under Exchange 
Act Section 19(b). The first is the requirement to file Security-Based 
Swap Submissions under new Exchange Act Section 3C. The second is the 
requirement to file Advance Notices under new Section 806(e). As 
discussed previously, the Commission anticipates that in many cases a 
clearing agency may take an action that would trigger more than one of 
these filing requirements \111\ and it seeks to streamline the filing 
processes for Exchange Act Section 3C, Section 806(e) and Exchange Act 
Section 19(b) by proposing that all such filings be made electronically 
on Form 19b-4.
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    \111\ Title VII contains a clause, which provides in pertinent 
part, that ``[u]nless otherwise provided by its terms, [Subtitle B] 
does not divest * * * the Securities and Exchange Commission * * * 
of any authority derived from any other provision of applicable 
law.'' See Section 771 of the Dodd-Frank Act. Similarly, Section 811 
of the Dodd-Frank Act provides that ``[u]nless otherwise provided by 
its terms, this title does not divest any appropriate financial 
regulator, any Supervisory Agency, or any other Federal or State 
agency, of any authority derived from any other applicable law, 
except that any [risk management] standards prescribed by the 
[Board] under section 805 shall supersede any less stringent 
requirements established under other authority to the extent of any 
conflict.'' Accordingly the new requirements under Titles VII and 
VIII do not supersede the existing requirements under the Exchange 
Act that would require clearing agencies (which are all SROs) to 
file a proposed rule change when the change proposed in a Security-
Based Swap Submission or Advance Notice also meets the criteria for 
a proposed rule change.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The amendments to Rule 19b-4 and to Form 19b-4 are being proposed 
to avoid duplicative filings and to streamline the process and burden 
on clearing agencies and the Commission. However, the filing 
requirements of Exchange Act Section 3C, Section 806(e) and Exchange 
Act Section 19(b) are distinct from each other and subject to different 
statutory standards for Commission review. As a result, a clearing 
agency that files a proposal pursuant to more than one of these 
sections must meet the requirements of each applicable regulatory 
scheme before the applicable change may become effective.
    Accordingly, it is likely that many proposals made by clearing 
agencies may be filed and require review under more than one of the 
three Commission review procedures discussed herein. For example, a 
designated clearing agency may be required to submit an Advance Notice 
in connection with its Security-Based Swap Submission if the 
requirement to clear the security-based swap described in the 
submission would materially affect the nature or level of risks 
presented by the designated clearing agency. Moreover, if the 
designated clearing agency did not have existing authority under its 
rules to clear the relevant security-based swap, such action likely 
also would require a proposed rule change filing under Exchange Act 
Section 19(b).
    In other cases, only one of the three Commission-review procedures 
may apply because the scope of proposals requiring review under each of 
Section 806(e) and Exchange Act Section 3C is in some ways broader and 
in other ways narrower in comparison to Exchange Act Section 19(b). 
There is, for example, the potential that certain changes to the 
operations of a designated clearing agency may not require a proposed 
rule change filing under Exchange Act Section 19(b) or a Security-Based 
Swap Submission under Exchange Act Section 3C, but may trigger a 
requirement to file an Advance Notice under Section 806(e). By 
contrast, because the notice requirement under Section 806(e) applies 
only to matters that materially affect the nature or level of risk 
presented by a designated clearing agency, it is also possible that a 
rule change filing would be required under Exchange Act Section 19(b) 
but not trigger the advance notice requirement under Section 806(e).
    When a clearing agency submits a filing for more than one purpose 
(i.e., proposed rule change, Security-Based Swap Submission and/or 
Advance Notice), the Commission will endeavor to evaluate such filings 
in tandem as part of a parallel process. Although the timing for review 
under each of Exchange Act Section 3C, Section 806(e) and Exchange Act 
Section 19(b) is different,\112\ all three processes contain some 
degree of flexibility, and the Commission will attempt to streamline 
the review processes to avoid any unnecessary delays or duplicative 
requests for information.
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    \112\ Assuming the Commission utilizes its maximum allotment of 
time under Exchange Act Section 19(b)(2), including with respect to 
any extensions of time requiring the consent of the SRO, the 
Commission must either approve, disapprove or institute proceedings 
with respect to a proposed rule change filing within approximately 
105 days after receipt. See Public Law 111-203, section 916 
(amending Exchange Act Section 19(b)(2)). 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2). 
Similarly, the Commission must make its determination on a Security-
Based Swap Submission within 90 days after receipt, unless the 
clearing agency agrees to an extension of this time limitation. See 
Public Law 111-203, section 763(a) (adding Exchange Act Section 
3C(b)(3)). The Commission is not required to approve affirmatively a 
proposed change filed as an Advance Notice under Section 806(e), but 
it must notify the designated clearing agency of any objection to 
the proposed change within 60 days after receiving the notice 
filing, unless the Commission requests additional information in 
consideration of the notice, in which case the 60-day period will 
recommence on the date such information is received by the 
Commission. 12 U.S.C. 5465(e)(1)(G).
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    However, each of the three processes would remain distinct from the 
other processes. Each proposed rule change filing, Security-Based Swap 
Submission and Advance Notice would be reviewed and evaluated 
independently by the Commission in accordance with the applicable 
statute and regulatory authority. Moreover, the proposed imposition of 
new requirements to file Advance Notices with the Commission and to 
make Security-Based Swap Submissions would not replace Exchange Act 
Section 19(b) notice process provision, nor will a filing made under 
one of the two new requirements eliminate the need to satisfy the 
requirements of the other process to the extent they are applicable. 
The Commission review required by Exchange Act Section 3C is different 
from the review required under Section 806(e), which in turn is 
different from the review required under Exchange Act Section 19(b).
    Section 806(e) requires an analysis of the risk management issues 
that may impact the clearing agency, its participants, or the market. 
Exchange Act Section 19(b), by contrast, requires a broader evaluation 
and an analysis as to whether the proposed rule change meets the 
requirements of the Exchange Act and the rules thereunder. Finally, 
Exchange Act Section 3C only applies when a clearing agency plans to 
accept for clearing a security-based swap (or a group, category, type 
or class of security-based swaps), and the standard

[[Page 82506]]

for review is based on a number of specified factors, including but not 
limited to: (i) How the submission is consistent with Exchange Act 
Section 17A and (ii) the factors specified in Exchange Act Section 3C 
relating to the security-based swap, the market for the security-based 
swaps, and the clearing agency.
    The Commission preliminarily believes that these distinct reviews 
make it possible for a submission made on Form 19b-4 to be acceptable 
under the standards for review for one of the three purposes but not 
under the others.\113\ Accordingly, under the proposal, where a 
proposed change is required to be filed pursuant to more than one 
filing requirement, the change would not become effective until 
determinations are obtained under each of the other applicable 
statutory provisions. In cases where only the requirements of one of 
Exchange Act Section 19(b), Exchange Act Section 3C or Section 806(e) 
are implicated, only the applicable process would need to be completed 
before the proposal could become effective.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \113\ For example, a rule proposal may provide for sound risk 
management practices but have an anticompetitive aspect that would 
not satisfy the requirements of the Exchange Act.
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III. General Request for Comment

    The Commission seeks comment generally on all aspects of the 
proposed amendments to Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4 and proposed Rules 
3Ca-1 and 3Ca-2. Commenters are encouraged to provide empirical data or 
economic studies to support their views and arguments related to the 
proposed rules. In addition to the questions above, commenters are 
welcome to offer their views on any other matter raised by the proposed 
rules. With respect to any comments, we note that they are of greatest 
assistance to the Commission if accompanied by supporting data and 
analysis of the issues addressed in those comments and if accompanied 
by alternative suggestions to our proposal where appropriate.
    In addition, Title VII requires that the Commission consult and 
coordinate to the extent possible with the CFTC for the purposes of 
assuring regulatory consistency and comparability, to the extent 
possible,\114\ and states that in adopting rules, the CFTC and 
Commission shall treat functionally or economically similar products or 
entities in a similar manner.\115\
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    \114\ Public Law 111-203, section 712(a)(7).
    \115\ Id.
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    The CFTC is required to adopt rules related to the process for 
review of swaps for mandatory clearing as required under Section 723 of 
the Dodd-Frank Act.\116\ Understanding that the Commission and the CFTC 
regulate different products and markets, and as such, appropriately may 
be proposing alternative regulatory requirements, we request comments 
on the impact of any differences between the Commission and CFTC 
approaches to the process for submissions for review of security-based 
swaps and swaps for mandatory clearing. Specifically, do the regulatory 
approaches under the Commission's proposed rulemaking pursuant to 
Exchange Act Section 3C and the CFTC's proposed rulemaking pursuant to 
Section 723 of the Dodd-Frank Act result in duplicative or inconsistent 
efforts on the part of market participants subject to both regulatory 
regimes or result in gaps between those regimes? If so, in what ways do 
commenters believe that such duplication, inconsistencies, or gaps 
should be minimized? Do commenters believe the approaches proposed by 
the Commission and the CFTC to regulate the process for review of 
security-based swaps and swaps for mandatory clearing are comparable? 
If not, why not? Do commenters believe there are approaches that would 
make the regulation of the process for review of security-based swaps 
for mandatory clearing more comparable? If so, what are they? Do 
commenters believe that it would be appropriate for us to adopt an 
approach proposed by the CFTC that differs from our proposal? Is so, 
which one? We request commenters to provide data, to the extent 
possible, supporting any such suggested approaches.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \116\ See Public Law 111-203, section 723 (amending Section 2 of 
the Commodity Exchange Act). See also supra note 55 discussing the 
CFTC's proposed rules pursuant to Section 723 of the Dodd-Frank Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Similarly, the CFTC is required to adopt rules related to the 
process, pursuant to Section 806(e), by which any financial market 
utility designated by the Council as systemically important (and for 
which the CFTC is the Supervisory Agency) will be required to provide 
advance notice to the CFTC of changes to its rules, procedures or 
operations that could materially affect the nature or level of risks 
presented by such financial market utility.\117\ The Commission 
requests comments on the impact of any differences between the 
Commission and CFTC approaches to the process for submitting proposed 
changes to rules, procedures or operations for review pursuant to 
Section 806(e). Specifically, do the regulatory approaches under the 
Commission's proposed rulemaking and the CFTC's proposed rulemaking 
pursuant to Section 806(e) result in duplicative or inconsistent 
efforts on the part of market participants subject to both regulatory 
regimes or result in gaps between those regimes? If so, in what ways do 
commenters believe that such duplication, inconsistencies, or gaps 
should be minimized? Do commenters believe the approaches proposed by 
the Commission and the CFTC with respect to the process for submitting 
advance notice of proposed changes to rules, procedures or operations 
for review pursuant to Section 806(e) are comparable? If not, why not? 
Do commenters believe there are approaches that would make the 
regulation of the process for submitting for advance review notices of 
proposed changes to rules, procedures or operations pursuant to Section 
806(e) more comparable? If so, what are they? Do commenters believe 
that it would be appropriate for us to adopt an approach proposed by 
the CFTC that differs from our proposal? Is so, which one? We request 
commenters to provide data, to the extent possible, supporting any such 
suggested approaches.
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    \117\ 75 FR 67282 (November 2, 2010).
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IV. Paperwork Reduction Act

    Rule 19b-4, Form 19b-4 and Rule 3Ca-1 contain ``collection of 
information requirements'' within the meaning of the Paperwork 
Reduction Act of 1995 (``PRA'').\118\ Accordingly, the Commission has 
submitted the information to the Office of Management and Budget 
(``OMB'') for review in accordance with 44 U.S.C. 3507 and 5 CFR 
1320.11. The Commission is proposing to submit the current collection 
of information titled ``Rule 19b-4 Filings with Respect to Proposed 
Rule Changes by Self-Regulatory Organizations'' (OMB Control No. 3235-
0045). The Commission is proposing to submit the current collection of 
information titled ``Form 19b-4 under the Securities Exchange Act of 
1934'' (OMB Control No. 3235-0045). The Commission also is proposing to 
submit a new collection of information titled ``Rule 3Ca-1 Stay of 
Clearing Requirement and Review by the Commission under the Securities 
Exchange Act of 1934''. An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a 
person is not required to respond to, a collection of information 
unless it displays a currently valid control number. Any information 
submitted to the Commission will be made publicly available.
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    \118\ 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.

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[[Page 82507]]

A. Summary of Collection of Information

1. Proposed Amendments to Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4
    Rule 19b-4 currently requires an SRO seeking Commission approval 
for a proposed rule change to provide the information stipulated in 
Form 19b-4. Form 19b-4 currently requires a description of the terms of 
a proposed rule change, the proposed rule change's impact on various 
market segments and the relationship between the proposed rule change 
and the SRO's existing rules. Form 19b-4 also requires an accurate 
statement of the authority and statutory basis for, and purpose of, the 
proposed rule change, the proposal's impact on competition and a 
summary of any written comments received by the SRO from SRO members. 
An SRO also is required to submit Form 19b-4 to the Commission 
electronically, post a proposed rule change on its Web site within two 
business days of its filing, and to post and maintain a current and 
complete set of its rules on its Web site.
    The Commission is proposing to require two new collections of 
information on Form 19b-4 related to new filing requirements applicable 
to clearing agencies under the Dodd-Frank Act. The proposed amendments 
would not otherwise change the collection of information requirements 
currently in Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4. These new reporting 
requirements are in addition to the information currently required by 
Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4.
    The proposed rule would require clearing agencies to file 
information with the Commission under Exchange Act Section 3C and 
Section 806(e) on Form 19b-4. Exchange Act Section 3C requires clearing 
agencies to submit for a Commission determination of whether mandatory 
clearing applies, any security-based swap, or any group, category, type 
or class of security-based swaps, that the clearing agency plans to 
accept for clearing and provide notice to its members of such 
submission. Section 806(e) requires that a clearing agency designated 
as systemically important by the Council file with the Commission 
advance notice of proposed changes to its rules, procedures or 
operations that could materially affect the nature or level of risk 
presented by the designated clearing agency.
    The Commission anticipates that in many cases, a clearing agency 
would be required to file a proposal under Exchange Act Section 3C or 
Section 806(e) when it is already required to file a proposed rule 
change under Exchange Act Section 19(b). Accordingly, clearing agencies 
would be able to submit on a Form 19b-4, proposals under Exchange Act 
Section 3C or Section 806(e) that they are already required to submit 
under Exchange Act Section 19(b). In some cases, however, a clearing 
agency would be required to file a proposal under Exchange Act Section 
3C or Section 806(e) and not under Exchange Act Section 19(b), for 
example where a proposal materially affects the nature or level of 
risks presented by the clearing agency but does not change the rules of 
the clearing agency.
    In addition, Exchange Act Section 3C and Section 806(e) each 
require information to be provided as part of the filing that is in 
addition to the information required to be filed with a proposed rule 
change under Exchange Act Section 19(b). A clearing agency would be 
required to include as part of the Security-Based Swap Submission a 
statement that includes, but is not limited to: (i) How the submission 
is consistent with Exchange Act Section 17A; (ii) information that will 
assist the Commission in the quantitative and qualitative assessment of 
the factors specified in Exchange Act Section 3C; and (iii) how the 
rules of the clearing agency meet the criteria for open access.
    Section 806(e) provides that the Advance Notice include a 
description of the nature of the proposed change and the expected 
effects on risks to the designated clearing agency, its participants, 
or the market and it must provide a description of how the designated 
clearing agency will manage any identified risks. A designated clearing 
agency also would be required to provide any additional information 
requested by the Commission necessary to assess the effect the proposed 
change would have on the nature or level of risks associated with the 
designated clearing agency's payment, clearing or settlement activities 
and the sufficiency of any proposed risk management techniques.
    The proposed amendments to Rule 19b-4 also would require a clearing 
agency to post certain information on its Web site, and require a SRO 
that does not post a proposed rule change on its Web site on the same 
day that it filed the proposal with the Commission to inform the 
Commission of the date on which it posted such proposal on its Web 
site.\119\ Security-Based Swap Submissions and Advance Notices, and any 
amendments thereto, would be required to be posted on the clearing 
agency's Web site within two business days of filing the information 
with the Commission. The information generally shall remain posted on 
the clearing agency's Web site until a determination is made with 
respect to the Security-Based Swap Submission or the Advance Notice 
becomes effective. A clearing agency also would be required to post 
notice on its Web site of the effectiveness of any change to its rules, 
procedures, or operations referred to in an Advance Notice within two 
business days of the effective date determined in accordance with 
Section 806(e).
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    \119\ Proposed Rule 19b-4(l).
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2. Stay of Clearing Requirement
    Proposed Rule 3Ca-1 provides that the Commission, on application of 
a counterparty to a security-based swap, or on the Commission's own 
initiative, may stay the clearing requirement until the Commission 
completes a review of the terms of the security-based swap (or group, 
category, type, or class of security-based swaps) and the clearing of 
the security-based swap (or group, category, type, or class of 
security-based swaps) that the clearing agency has accepted for 
clearing. A counterparty to a security-based swap that applies for a 
stay of the clearing requirement for a security-based swap, or any 
group, category, type, or class of security-based swaps, would be 
required to submit to the Commission the information set forth in 
proposed Rule 3Ca-1(b).
    Any clearing agency that has accepted for clearing a security-based 
swap, or any group, category, type or class of security-based swaps, 
that is subject to the stay of the clearing requirement would be 
required to provide information requested by the Commission as it 
determines to be necessary and appropriate to assess any of the factors 
in the course of the Commission's review. The Commission preliminarily 
believes such information would likely include updates to the 
information the clearing agency provided in the Security-Based Swap 
Submission relating to the security-based swap then subject to the stay 
under review.

B. Proposed Use of Information

1. Proposed Amendments to Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4
    The information currently required under Rule 19b-4 and reported on 
Form 19b-4 is used by the Commission to review rule change proposals 
filed by SROs pursuant to Exchange Act Section 19(b)(1) \120\ and to 
provide notice of the proposals to the general public. The Commission 
relies upon the information received in SRO filings, as well as public 
comment regarding the information, in reviewing and reaching

[[Page 82508]]

decisions about whether to approve a proposed rule change.
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    \120\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
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    The information to be provided by clearing agencies pursuant to the 
proposed amendments to Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4 would be used by the 
Commission to evaluate Security-Based Swap Submissions and Advance 
Notices. The Commission would use the information filed on Form 19b-4 
related to Security-Based Swap Submissions to determine whether the 
security-based swap, or any group, category, type or class of security-
based swaps, described in the Security-Based Swap Submission is 
required to be cleared pursuant to Exchange Act Section 3C(1).
    The Commission would use the information on Form 19b-4 related to 
Advance Notices filed under Section 806(e) to determine the effect on 
the nature or level of risks that would be presented by a designated 
clearing agency based on a proposed change to its rules, procedures or 
operations, and the expected effects on risk to the designated clearing 
agency, its participants and the market and to determine whether the 
Commission should make an objection to the proposed change. In 
addition, the information on the form would be provided to the Board 
because the Commission is required to provide copies of all Advance 
Notices and any additional information provided by the designated 
clearing agency relating to the Advance Notice and to consult with the 
Board before taking any action on or completing its review of the 
Advance Notice.\121\ In some instances, the Commission also may use the 
information on the form to determine whether to allow a proposed change 
to take effect in less than 60 days following the receipt of the 
Advance Notice and to determine whether a change made on an emergency 
basis is warranted or whether it should be modified or rescinded.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \121\ 12 U.S.C. 5465(e)(3) and (4).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The information proposed to be filed on Form 19b-4 relating to 
Exchange Act Section 3C and Section 806(e) also would be used by 
participants of the clearing agency, market participants, other 
clearing agencies, or the general public to comment on the proposal, as 
the Commission is proposing to require that a clearing agency post the 
information on its Web site. In addition, pursuant to Exchange Act 
Section 3C, a clearing agency would be required to provide its members 
with notice of the Security-Based Swap Submission. As with proposed 
rule changes under Exchange Act Section 19(b), the Commission would 
solicit comment from interested parties on proposals filed under 
Exchange Act Section 3C and Section 806(e). Interested parties could 
use the information to comment on the proposed change and to provide 
feedback on the development of the clearing agency's service offerings 
and the rules, procedures and operations of the clearing agency.
    The information collected by the Commission with respect to the 
date on which the SRO posted a proposed rule change on its Web site (if 
such posting date is not the same as the filing date) would be used to 
inform the Commission of the date by which the Commission must send the 
SRO notice to the Federal Register for publication.
2. Stay of Clearing Requirement
    The information provided as required by proposed Rule 3Ca-1 would 
be used by the Commission to determine whether to grant the stay of the 
clearing requirement sought by a counterparty and to review whether the 
clearing requirement would continue to apply to such security-based 
swap, or any group, category, type, or class of security-based swaps.

C. Respondents

1. Proposed Amendments to Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4
    There are currently 25 SROs subject to the collection of 
information under Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4, although that number may 
vary owing to the consolidation of SROs or the introduction of new 
entities. In fiscal year 2009, these SRO respondents filed 1,405 rule 
change proposals subject to the current collection of information, of 
which 1,071 proposed rule changes ultimately became effective.
    Although Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4 apply to all SROs, the new 
collection of information requirements in the proposed rules would 
apply to clearing agencies and, in certain limited circumstances, to 
other SROs. The proposed amendments relating to Exchange Act Section 3C 
would apply to clearing agencies that clear security-based swaps. 
Currently, four clearing agencies are authorized to clear credit 
default swaps, which include security-based swaps,\122\ pursuant to 
temporary conditional exemptions under Exchange Act Section 36.\123\ 
The obligation to centrally clear security-based swap transactions is a 
new requirement under Title VII, and it is anticipated that clearing 
agencies operating under temporary conditional exemptions will register 
or will become registered security-based swap clearing agencies.\124\ 
Based on the fact that there are currently four clearing agencies 
authorized to clear security-based swaps and that there could 
conceivably be a few more in the foreseeable future,\125\ the 
Commission preliminarily estimates that four to six clearing agencies 
may plan to centrally clear security-based swaps and be subject to the 
information collection requirements in the proposed rules relating to 
Exchange Act Section 3C. The Commission is using the higher estimate 
(six) for the PRA analysis.
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    \122\ The Commission authorized five entities to clear credit 
default swaps. See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 60372 (July 
23, 2009), 74 FR 37748 (July 29, 2009) and 61973 (April 23, 2010), 
75 FR 22656 (April 29, 2010) (CDS clearing by ICE Clear Europe 
Limited); 60373 (July 23, 2009), 74 FR 37740 (July 29, 2009) and 
61975 (April 23, 2010), 75 FR 22641 (April 29, 2010) (CDS clearing 
by Eurex Clearing AG); 59578 (March 13, 2009), 74 FR 11781 (March 
19, 2009), 61164 (December 14, 2009), 74 FR 67258 (December 18, 
2009) and 61803 (March 30, 2010), 75 FR 17181 (April 5, 2010) (CDS 
clearing by Chicago Mercantile Exchange Inc.); 59527 (March 6, 
2009), 74 FR 10791 (March 12, 2009), 61119 (December 4, 2009), 74 FR 
65554 (December 10, 2009) and 61662 (March 5, 2010), 75 FR 11589 
(March 11, 2010) (CDS clearing by ICE Trust US LLC); 59164 (December 
24, 2008), 74 FR 139 (January 2, 2009) (temporary CDS clearing by 
LIFFE A&M and LCH.Clearnet Ltd.) (collectively, ``CDS Clearing 
Exemption Orders''). LIFFE A&M and LCH.Clearnet Ltd. allowed their 
order to lapse without seeking renewal.
    \123\ 15 U.S.C. 78mm. Of the four clearing agencies granted 
temporary exemptions from registration, only three have cleared 
products that likely are classified as security-based swaps under 
Title VII.
    \124\ See Public Law 111-203, section 763(b).
    \125\ The Commission does not expect there to be a large number 
of clearing agencies that clear security-based swaps, based on the 
significant level of capital and other financial resources necessary 
for the formation of a clearing agency.
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    The amendments to Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4 relating to the Section 
806(e) advance notice requirement of changes to rules, procedures or 
operations would only apply to clearing agencies that are registered 
with the Commission, designated by the Council as systemically 
important, and for which the Commission is the Supervisory Agency. 
There are currently six clearing agencies registered with the 
Commission; however, only four of these clearing agencies are currently 
clearing securities transactions. In addition, it is anticipated that 
several more clearing agencies will be registered with the Commission 
following the effectiveness of Title VII to clear security-based swaps. 
For purposes of the PRA analysis, the Commission estimates that the 
four registered securities clearing agencies that are currently 
clearing securities and the six estimated clearing agencies that may 
clear security-based swaps would be subject to the applicable 
collection of information requirements.

[[Page 82509]]

2. Stay of Clearing Requirement
    The Commission preliminarily estimates that six security-based swap 
clearing agencies' activities associated with security-based swap 
clearing requirements would potentially be subject to the collection of 
information under proposed Rule 3Ca-1 in connection with any 
counterparty requesting a stay of clearing requirement.

D. Total Annual Reporting and Recordkeeping Burden

1. Background
    The proposed amendments to Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4 are designed 
to facilitate the processes for providing the Commission with Security-
Based Swap Submissions and Advance Notices and to make these processes 
efficient by utilizing the existing infrastructure for proposed rule 
changes, thereby conserving both clearing agency and Commission 
resources. When amended, Form 19b-4 would enable clearing agencies to 
submit Security-Based Swap Submissions and Advance Notices 
electronically with the Commission. The proposed amendments to Rule 
19b-4 also would require a clearing agency to post on its Web site any 
Security-Based Swap Submissions and any Advance Notices, and any 
amendments thereto, submitted to the Commission within two business 
days of submission. A further amendment to Rule 19b-4 would require an 
SRO that filed a proposed rule change with the Commission to inform the 
Commission of the date on which it posted such proposal on its Web site 
if the posting did not occur on the same day that the SRO filed the 
proposal with the Commission. Finally, proposed Rule 3Ca-1 would 
specify the process for a security-based swap counterparty to apply to 
the Commission for a stay of the clearing requirement.
2. Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4
    In order to estimate the collection of information, the Commission 
received informal comments from a few clearing agencies that would be 
subject to the new requirements in the proposed amendments to Rule 19b-
4 and Form 19b-4. Clearing agencies would have to train personnel and 
develop policies and procedures to implement the proposed new filing 
requirements under Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4 in connection with 
Security-Based Swap Submissions and Advance Notices. In addition, 
clearing agencies indicated they would have to submit additional 
information to the Commission, either as separate filings or as part of 
filings also submitted as proposed rule changes under Exchange Act 
Section 19(b).
    The clearing agencies emphasized that the estimated burdens would 
depend in large part on the rules ultimately adopted by the Commission 
to define and determine how frequently Security-Based Swap Submissions 
and Advance Notices would be required to be filed and the nature and 
extent of information that would be required with each filing. In 
addition, the clearing agencies stated that the burden per filing could 
vary widely, depending on the complexity of each individual filing. For 
example, some clearing agency proposals may require more information or 
analysis to be submitted as part of the filing. The clearing agencies 
also stated that the annual burden also could vary widely from year to 
year depending on the number of new proposals the clearing agency makes 
in a particular year. As a result, the estimates provided as part of 
the survey are preliminary and may change after clearing agencies have 
the opportunity to review and closely evaluate the proposed rules.
    The estimates varied among clearing agencies, which may reflect the 
different internal processes, training programs, and review procedures 
for new projects currently in place at the different clearing agencies. 
In addition, some clearing agencies are currently registered with the 
Commission while others are not. Clearing agencies registered with the 
Commission already file proposed rule changes under Exchange Act 
Section 19(b) and have more familiarity with the collection of 
information requirements related to Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4, while 
clearing agencies that are not registered with the Commission are not 
as familiar with these requirements and may incur a greater burden in 
connection with learning EFFS and training personnel.
    The Commission heard from staff of eight clearing agencies. The 
estimates varied among clearing agencies, and therefore the Commission 
is using conservative numbers in developing its estimates for the PRA. 
In addition, in order to provide a conservative estimate, the 
Commission has calculated the burden for the requirements related to 
Advance Notices assuming that they would apply to all ten clearing 
agencies and the burden for the requirements related to Security-Based 
Swap Submissions assuming they would apply to six clearing agencies.
    Finally, the Commission recognizes that there would likely to be 
some substantive and procedural overlap with respect to the processes 
for preparing and submitting Security-Based Swap Submissions, Advance 
Notices and proposed rule changes that relate to the same subject 
matter. For example, in connection with a decision to clear a new type 
of security-based swap that was not previously permitted under the 
clearing agency's rules, a clearing agency could be required to make a 
filing as a Security-Based Swap Submission, an Advance Notice and a 
proposed rule change. In this case, because these submissions all 
relate to the same underlying issue, the amount of time required to 
prepare a single Form 19b-4 for all three purposes is likely to be less 
than the aggregate amount of time ordinarily required to prepare and 
submit an unrelated Security-Based Swap Submission, Advance Notice and 
proposed rule change. Nevertheless, the Commission is calculating the 
PRA burden for each process individually without accounting for any 
reduction due to the anticipated overlap. The Commission has decided to 
calculate the burdens in this manner in order to provide the most 
conservative estimates possible. Additionally, the estimates of each of 
the following burdens are derived from discussions between the 
Commission's staff and personnel of the clearing agencies, as described 
above.
a. Internal Policies and Procedures
    The Commission preliminarily believes that newly-registered 
clearing agencies could incur some one-time costs associated with 
training their personnel about the procedures for submitting Security-
Based Swap Submissions and/or Advance Notices in electronic format 
through EFFS. Based on staff discussions with the clearing agencies, 
the Commission preliminarily estimates that each newly registered 
clearing agency will spend approximately 20 hours training all staff 
members who will use EFFS to submit Security-Based Swap Submissions, 
Advance Notices and/or proposed rule changes electronically. 
Accordingly, the Commission estimates that the total one-time burden of 
training staff members of newly-registered clearing agencies to use 
EFFS will be 120 hours (six clearing agencies x 20 hours).
    Going forward, the Commission preliminarily estimates that each 
existing SRO (including currently-registered clearing agencies) will 
spend approximately 10 hours annually training new staff members and 
updating the training of existing staff members to use EFFS, resulting 
in a total annual burden of 310 hours ((six newly-registered clearing 
agencies x 10 hours) + (25 SROs x 10 hours)). The Commission 
preliminarily believes that only a minimal amount of EFFS training

[[Page 82510]]

will be submission-specific and that training a person to submit either 
a proposed rules change, Security-Based Swap Submission or Advance 
Notice will generally be sufficient to allow such person to make one or 
more of the other types of submissions.
    Based on staff discussions with the clearing agencies, the 
Commission preliminarily estimates that there would be a one-time 
paperwork burden of 130 hours for each newly-registered clearing agency 
to draft and implement internal policies and procedures relating to 
using EFFS to submit Security-Based Swap Submissions, Advance Notices 
and proposed rule changes with the Commission, for a total of 780 hours 
(130 hours x six newly-registered clearing agencies). In addition, the 
Commission preliminarily estimates that there will be a one-time 
paperwork burden of 30 hours for each currently-registered clearing 
agency to draft and implement modifications to existing internal 
policies and procedures for using EFFS in order to update them for 
submitting Security-Based Swap Submissions and/or Advance Notices with 
the Commission for a total of 120 hours (30 hours x four currently-
registered clearing agencies).
b. Proposed Rule Changes
    An SRO rule change proposal is generally filed with the Commission 
after an SRO's staff has obtained approval of its board of directors. 
The time required to complete a filing varies significantly and is 
difficult to separate from the time an SRO spends in developing 
internally the proposed rule change. In a PRA analysis conducted in 
2004 in connection with amendments to Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4, the 
Commission estimated that 34 hours is the amount of time that would be 
required to complete an average proposed rule change filing and 129 
hours is the amount of time required to complete a novel or complex 
proposed rule change filing.\126\ Based on the filings it currently 
receives from SROs, the Commission preliminarily believes that these 
estimates remain valid and has relied on these figures to prepare the 
analysis discussed below.\127\
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    \126\ See Exchange Act Release No. 50486, 69 FR 60287, supra 
note 51.
    \127\ In 2008, the Commission submitted to OMB a request for 
approval of an extension of the existing collection of information 
provided for in Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4. 73 FR 5245 (January 29, 
2008) (Submission for OMB review; comment request). The PRA analysis 
conducted in 2008 estimated that the average time to complete a 
proposed rule change filing was 23.22 hours, without differentiating 
between average and complex rule filings. In light of the changes 
made to Exchange Act Section 19(b) pursuant to Section 916 of Dodd-
Frank, which provides for new deadlines by which the Commission must 
publish and act upon proposed rule changes, the Commission has 
decided to revert to the figures contained in the PRA analysis 
conducted in 2004. Specifically, the shortened time period by which 
proposed rule changes will be reviewed by the Commission is likely 
to cause the SROs to spend additional time preparing and checking 
the filing, as there will be less time for them to correct a filing 
after it has been made, justifying the use of the more conservative 
estimates.
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    In fiscal year 2009, 25 SRO respondents filed 1,405 rule change 
proposals subject to the current collection of information. Of this 
total, the Commission estimates that 60 proposed rule changes could be 
characterized as novel or complex and 1,345 proposed rule changes could 
be characterized as average. The Commission preliminarily estimates 
that the total annual reporting burden for filing proposed rule changes 
with the Commission under the proposed amendments to Rule 19b-4 and 
Form 19b-4 will be 66,303 hours (((1,345/25) x 31\128\ average rule 
change proposals x 34 hours) + ((60/25) x 31 complex rule change 
proposals x 129 hours)). Thus, on average, the reporting burden for 
filing proposed rule changes is 38.06 hours (66,303 hours/(1668 average 
rule change proposals + 74 complex rule change proposals)).
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    \128\ The number of projected SROs is equal to 31 (25 currently 
registered SROs + six newly-registered clearing agencies).
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c. Security-Based Swap Submissions
    The time required by clearing agencies to prepare, review and 
submit Security-Based Swap Submissions to comply with proposed Rule 
19b-4(o)(1) likely will vary significantly based on the unique 
characteristics of each Security-Based Swap Submission and the 
submitting clearing agency. Based on staff discussions with the 
clearing agencies, the Commission preliminarily estimates that the 
amount of time that a clearing agency would require to internally 
prepare, review and submit a Security-Based Swap Submission is 140 
hours. The Commission also estimates that each clearing agency will 
submit 20 Security-Based Swap Submissions annually. Accordingly, the 
Commission estimates that the total annual reporting burden for 
clearing agencies submitting Security-Based Swap Submissions 
electronically with the Commission under the proposed amendments to 
Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4 will be 16,800 hours (20 Security-Based Swap 
Submissions x 140 hours x six respondents).
    The Commission also preliminarily estimates that a clearing agency 
would require 60 hours of outside legal work to prepare, review and 
submit a Security-Based Swap Submission, based on staff discussions 
with the clearing agencies. Assuming an hourly cost of $354 for an 
outside attorney,\129\ the total annual cost in the aggregate for the 
six respondent clearing agencies to meet these requirements would be 
$2,548,800 (60 hours x $354 per hour for an outside attorney x 20 
Security-Based Swap Submissions x six respondent clearing agencies).
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    \129\ The hourly rate for an attorney is from SIFMA's Management 
& Professional Earnings in the Securities Industry 2010, modified by 
the Commission's staff to account for an 1,800-hour work-year and 
multiplied by 5.35 to account for bonuses, firm size, employee 
benefits and overhead.
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d. Advance Notices
    With respect to Advance Notices, the Commission preliminarily 
estimates that the amount of time that designated clearing agency 
representatives will require to internally prepare, review and 
electronically file each Advance Notice with the Commission to comply 
with proposed Rule 19b-4(n)(1) is 90 hours. This figure is based on the 
staff's discussions with the clearing agencies. The Commission also 
estimates that two hours should be added to the time required to 
prepare each Advance Notice to comply with the requirement contained in 
proposed Rule 19b-4(n)(5) to provide to the Board copies of all 
materials submitted to the Commission relating to an Advance Notice 
contemporaneously with such submission to the Commission. The 
Commission preliminarily estimates that each designated clearing agency 
will submit 35 Advance Notices to the Commission annually. Accordingly, 
the Commission estimates that the total annual reporting burden on 
designated clearing agencies submitting Advance Notices electronically 
with the Commission under the proposed amendments to Rule 19b-4 and 
Form 19b-4 will be 32,200 hours (35 Advance Notices x 92 hours x ten 
respondents).
    Based on staff discussions with the clearing agencies, the 
Commission also preliminarily estimates that a designated clearing 
agency will require 40 hours of outside legal work to prepare, review 
and electronically file each Advance Notice with the Commission. 
Assuming an hourly cost of $354 for an outside attorney,\130\ the total 
annual cost in the aggregate for the ten respondent clearing agencies 
to meet these requirements would be $4,956,000 (40 hours x $354 per 
hour for an outside attorney x 35 Advance Notices x ten respondents).
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    \130\ See id.

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[[Page 82511]]

e. Summary
    The Commission preliminarily estimates that the total annual 
reporting burden for clearing agencies to internally prepare, file and 
submit Security-Based Swap Submissions, proposed rule changes and 
Advance Notices electronically with the Commission under the Rule 19b-4 
and Form 19b-4 will be 115,303 hours (16,800 hours for Security-Based 
Swap Submissions + 32,200 hours for Advance Notices + 66,303 hours for 
proposed rule changes). The Commission also preliminarily estimates 
that the total annual cost in the aggregate for the respondent clearing 
agencies to internally prepare, file and submit Security-Based Swap 
Submissions, proposed rule changes and Advance Notices electronically 
with the Commission under the Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4 will be 
$7,504,800 ($2,548,800 for Security-Based Swap Submissions + $4,956,000 
for Advance Notices).
3. Posting of Security-Based Swap Submissions, Advance Notices and 
Proposed Rule Changes on Clearing Agency Web Sites
    The Commission preliminarily believes that newly-registered 
clearing agencies could incur some one-time costs associated with 
posting Security-Based Swap Submissions, Advance Notices and proposed 
rule changes on their Web sites. The Commission preliminarily estimates 
that each newly-registered clearing agency will spend approximately 15 
hours creating or updating its existing Web site in order to provide 
the capability to post these submissions online resulting in a total 
one-time burden of 90 hours (six clearing agencies x 15 hours).
    With respect to annual burdens, the Commission preliminarily 
estimates that four hours would be required by a clearing agency to 
post a Security-Based Swap Submission on its Web site to comply with 
proposed Rule 19b-4(o)(5). This figure is based on the staff's 
discussions with the clearing agencies. The Commission estimates that 
the total annual reporting burden for clearing agencies to post 
Security-Based Swap Submissions on their Web sites will be 480 hours 
(20 Security-Based Swap Submissions x four hours x six respondents).
    The Commission preliminarily estimates that four hours would be 
required by a designated clearing agency to post an Advance Notice on 
its Web site to comply with proposed Rule 19b-4(n)(3). The Commission 
preliminarily estimates that the total annual reporting burden for 
designated clearing agencies to post Advance Notices on their Web sites 
will be 1,400 hours (35 Advance Notices x four hours x 10 respondents).
    To comply with proposed Rule 19b-4(n)(4), the Commission estimates 
that four hours would be required by a designated clearing agency to 
post notice on its Web site of any change to its rules, procedures or 
operations referred to in an Advance Notice once it has been permitted 
to take effect. The Commission therefore estimates that the total 
annual reporting burden for designated clearing agencies to post notice 
on their Web sites of any changes to their rules, procedures or 
operations referred to in Advance Notices would be 1,400 hours (35 
Advance Notices x four hours x 10 respondents).
    The Commission previously estimated that an SRO would take four 
hours to post proposed rule change proposals under Exchange Act Section 
19(b) and amendments on its Web site and four hours to update the 
posted SRO rules on its Web site once the proposed rules become 
effective.\131\ The Commission preliminarily believes that these 
estimates remain valid. In addition, of the 1,405 proposed rule changes 
filed in fiscal year 2009, 1,071 were approved or non-abrogated. 
Accordingly, the total annual reporting burden for SROs to post 
proposed rule change proposals on their Web sites and to update their 
posted rules on their Web sites once the proposed rules become 
effective will be 12,280 hours ((1,071/25) x 31 SRO respondents) 
approved or non-abrogated rules x four hours) + ((1,405/25) x 31 SRO 
respondents) rule change proposals x four hours)).
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    \131\ See supra note 127.
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    In summary, the Commission preliminarily estimates that the total 
annual reporting burden for all clearing agencies to post submitted 
Security-Based Swap Submissions, Advance Notices, notices of changes to 
rules, procedures or operations referred to in Advance Notices once 
they take effect and proposed rule changes on their Web sites under 
Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4 will be 15,560 hours (480 hours for Security-
Based Swap Submissions + 1,400 hours for Advance Notices + 1,400 hours 
for posting notices of changes to rules, procedures or operations 
referred to in Advance Notices + 12,280 hours for proposed rule 
changes). The Commission requests comment on all of the above 
estimates.
4. Rule 3Ca-1
    Commission staff communicated with certain clearing agencies that 
likely would be subject to a stay of the clearing requirement and 
related review under proposed Rule3Ca-1 in order to estimate the 
collection of information. The clearing agencies emphasized that the 
estimated burdens would depend in large part on the number of stays 
requested annually and the scope of the information requested by the 
Commission in the course of the related review.
    The Commission staff communicated with staff of three entities, 
representing four clearing agencies total, as two clearing agencies are 
subsidiaries of the same holding company. As the responses varied among 
clearing agencies, the Commission has generally used conservative 
responses in developing its estimates for the PRA.
    Based on staff discussions with the clearing agencies, the 
Commission preliminarily estimates that a clearing agency will spend 
approximately 18 hours to retrieve, review and submit the information 
associated with the stay of the clearing requirement. The Commission 
preliminarily estimates that each clearing agency will be required to 
provide information requested by the Commission in the course of its 
reviews of five requests for a stay of the clearing requirement, 
resulting in a total annual reporting burden of 540 hours (five stay 
applications x 18 hours to retrieve, review and submit the information 
x six clearing agencies). The Commission also preliminarily estimates 
that a clearing agency will require seven hours of outside legal work 
to retrieve, review and submit the information associated with the stay 
of the clearing requirement. This figure is based on the staff's 
discussions with the clearing agencies. Assuming an hourly cost of $354 
for an outside attorney,\132\ the total estimated annual cost in the 
aggregate for the six respondent clearing agencies to meet these 
requirements would be $74,340 (seven hours x $354 per hour for an 
outside attorney x five stay of clearing applications x six 
respondents). The Commission requests comment on these estimates.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \132\ See supra note 129.
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    Finally, based on its estimates with respect to the preparation 
Security-Based Swap Submissions, the Commission preliminarily estimates 
that 100 hours would be required by a counterparty to a security-based 
swap to prepare and submit an application requesting a stay of the 
clearing requirement. The Commission preliminarily estimates that 
counterparties to security-based swaps transactions will submit 30 
applications requesting stays of the clearing

[[Page 82512]]

requirement. Assuming an hourly cost of $354 for an outside 
attorney,\133\ the total annual cost in the aggregate for the 
respondent counterparties to meet these requirements would be 
$1,062,000 (100 hours x $354 per hour for an outside attorney x 30 stay 
of clearing applications).
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    \133\ See supra note 129.
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    The Commission requests comment on all of the above estimates.
4. Amendment To Conform to Section 916 of the Dodd-Frank Act
    The Commission preliminarily estimates that the requirement that an 
SRO inform the Commission of the date on which it posted a proposed 
rule change on its Web site (if the posting did not occur on the same 
day that the SRO filed the proposal with the Commission) will impose 
only a minimal burden, if any, on an SRO. The Commission preliminarily 
believes that SROs currently post their proposed rule changes on their 
Web site on the same day on which they file them with the Commission. 
Further, it is in the interest of an SRO to continue to do so, since 
prompt Web site posting triggers the requirement on the Commission to 
publish notice of the proposal. The new notice requirement would only 
be applicable in a situation where the SRO is unable to post its 
proposed rule change on the same day that it files with the Commission, 
which the Commission expects would be an unlikely occurrence. However, 
because the deadline applicable to Commission publication is tied to 
SRO Web site posting, and the Commission has no means of ascertaining 
when Web site posting was made other than receiving that information 
from the SRO itself, the Commission is proposing this requirement to 
capture necessary information to allow it to comply with Exchange Act 
Section 19, as amended by Section 916 of the Dodd-Frank Act.
    Based on its experience receiving and reviewing proposed rule 
changes filed by SROs, the Commission preliminarily estimates that SROs 
will fail to post proposed rule changes on their Web sites on the same 
day as the filing was made with the Commission in 1% of all cases, or 
14 times each year. Further, the Commission preliminarily estimates 
that each SRO will spend approximately one hour preparing and 
submitting notice to the Commission of the date on which it posted the 
proposed rule change on its Web site, resulting in a total annual 
burden of 14 hours.
    Thus, the Commission preliminarily estimates that the total annual 
reporting burden under Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4 will be 131,987 hours 
in the initial year and 131,187 hours thereafter.\134\ Additionally, 
the Commission preliminarily estimates that the total annual reporting 
burden under proposed Rule 3Ca-1 will be 540 hours. The Commission 
requests comment on all of the above estimates.
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    \134\ In the initial year, the paperwork burden is calculated as 
follows: 120 Hours (one-time paperwork burden to train newly-
registered clearing agency staff members to use EFFS) + 780 hours 
(one-time paperwork burden for each newly-registered clearing agency 
to draft and implement policies and procedures relating to using 
EFFS to submit proposed rule changes, Security-Based Swap 
Submissions and Advance Notices) + 120 hours (one-time paperwork 
burden for each currently-registered clearing agency to draft and 
implement policies and procedures relating to using EFFS to submit 
Security-Based Swap Submissions and/or Advance Notices) + 90 hours 
(one-time paperwork burden for each newly-registered clearing agency 
to create or update their existing Web sites in order to provide the 
capability to post proposed rule changes, Security-Based Swap 
Submissions and Advance Notices online) + 115,303 hours (the total 
annual reporting burden for all SROs to prepare, review and submit 
Security-Based Swap Submissions, proposed rule changes and Advance 
Notices with the Commission) + 15,560 hours (the total annual burden 
for all SROs to post Security-Based Swap Submissions, Advance 
Notices, notices of changes to rules, procedures or operations 
referred to in Advance Notices and proposed rule changes (including 
updates to the posted SRO rules) on their Web sites + 14 hours for 
SROs to notify the Commission of the date on which it posted a 
proposed rule change on its Web site = 131,987 hours. After the 
initial year, the paperwork burden is calculated as follows: 115,303 
Hours (the total annual reporting burden for all SROs to prepare, 
review and submit Security-Based Swap Submissions, proposed rule 
changes and Advance Notices with the Commission) + 15,560 hours (the 
total annual burden for all SROs to post Security-Based Swap 
Submissions, Advance Notices, notices of changes to rules, 
procedures or operations referred to in Advance Notices and on their 
Web sites) + 310 hours (the total annual burden of training new 
staff members and updating the training of existing staff members to 
use EFFS) + 14 hours for SROs to notify the Commission of the date 
on which it posted a proposed rule change on its Web site = 131,187 
hours.
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E. Retention Period of Recordkeeping Requirements

    Clearing agencies will be required to retain records of the 
collection of information (the manually signed signature page of the 
Form 19b-4, a file available to interested persons for public 
inspection and copying, of all Security-Based Swap Submissions, Advance 
Notices and proposed rule changes made pursuant to Rule 19b-4) and all 
correspondence and other communications reduced to writing (including 
comment letters) to and from such SROs concerning any Security-Based 
Swap Submissions, Advance Notices and proposed rule changes, for a 
period of not less than five years, the first two years in an easily 
accessible place, according to the current recordkeeping requirements 
set forth in Exchange Act Rule 17a-1.\135\
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    \135\ SROs may also destroy or otherwise dispose of such records 
at the end of five years according to Rule 17a-6 of the Act. 17 CFR 
240.17a-6.
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    The Commission preliminarily believes that maintaining the physical 
signature page, Security-Based Swap Submissions, Advance Notices, 
proposed rule changes and all related correspondence and other 
communications would enable interested parties, including the 
Commission, to access a record of the authority under which a 
particular Security-Based Swap Submission, Advance Notice or proposed 
rule change was made. The Commission notes that the retention of the 
physical signature page is an existing maintenance requirement for 
SROs.\136\ The Commission further notes that a similar manual signature 
retention requirement exists for EDGAR filers.\137\
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    \136\ Rule 19b-4(j) currently requires SROs to sign Form 19b-4 
electronically in connection with filing a proposed rule change and 
to retain a copy of the signature page in accordance with Rule 17a-
1. Under the proposed rules, Rule 19b-4(j) would be modified such 
that it would apply also to Security-Based Swap Submissions and 
Advance Notices.
    \137\ 17 CFR 232.302(b).
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F. Collection of Information Is Mandatory

    Any collection of information pursuant to Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4 
to require electronic submission of security-based swaps, Advance 
Notices and proposed rule changes with the Commission is a mandatory 
collection of information. Any collection of information pursuant to 
Rule 19b-4 to require Web site posting by clearing agencies of their 
Security-Based Swap Submissions, Advance Notices and proposed rules 
changes also is a mandatory collection of information. Any collection 
of information pursuant to the proposed Rule 3Ca-1 in connection with 
the application for the stay of the clearing requirement is a mandatory 
collection of information. Any collection of information pursuant to 
Rule 19b-4 to require SROs to inform the Commission of the date on 
which it posted a proposed rule change on its Web site (if such date is 
not the same day that it filed the proposal with the Commission) also 
is a mandatory collection of information.

G. Responses to Collection of Information Will Not Be Kept Confidential

    The collection of information pursuant to Rule 19b-4, Form 19b-4 
and proposed Rule 3Ca-1 would not be

[[Page 82513]]

kept confidential.\138\ The posting of Security-Based Swap Submissions, 
Advance Notices and proposed rule changes would be publicly available 
on the SRO's Web site.
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    \138\ While there is a general requirement that information be 
made publicly available, SROs may request confidential treatment of 
certain information in accordance with the provisions of the Freedom 
of Information Act. 5 U.S.C. 552.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

H. Request for Comment

    Pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(2)(B), the Commission solicits 
comments to:
    (1) Evaluate whether the proposed collection of information is 
necessary for the performance of the functions of the agency, including 
whether the information shall have practical utility;
    (2) Evaluate the accuracy of the agency's estimate of the burden of 
the proposed collection of information;
    (3) Enhance the quality, utility and clarity of the information to 
be collected; and
    (4) Minimize the burden of collection of information on those who 
are to respond, including through the use of automated collection 
techniques or other forms of information technology.
    Persons wishing to submit comments on the collection of information 
requirements should direct them to the following persons: (1) Desk 
Officer for the Securities and Exchange Commission, Office of 
Information and Regulatory Affairs, Office of Management and Budget, 
Room 3208, New Executive Office Building, Washington, DC 20503; and (2) 
Elizabeth Murphy, Secretary, Securities and Exchange Commission, 
Station Place, 100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC 20549-1090 with 
reference to File No. S7-44-10. OMB is required to make a decision 
concerning the collection of information between 30 and 60 days after 
publication, so a comment to OMB is best assured of having its full 
effect if OMB receives it within 30 days of publication. The Commission 
has submitted the proposed collection of information to OMB for 
approval. Requests for the materials submitted to OMB by the Commission 
with regard to this collection of information should be in writing, 
refer to File No. S7-44-10, and be submitted to the Securities and 
Exchange Commission, Records Management, Office of Investor Education 
and Advocacy, Station Place, 100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC 20549-
0213.

V. Consideration of Costs and Benefits

A. Processes for Security-Based Swap Submissions for Review and Staying 
a Clearing Requirement While the Clearing of the Security-Based Swap Is 
Reviewed

    Under Exchange Act Section 3C, Congress mandated that the 
Commission adopt rules: (i) For a clearing agency's submission for 
review of any security-based swap, or a group, category, type or class 
of security-based swaps, that the clearing agency seeks to accept for 
clearing, and the manner of notice the clearing agency must provide to 
its members of such submission; and (ii) for the procedure by which the 
Commission may stay a clearing requirement while the clearing of a 
security-based swap is reviewed. The proposed rule relating to 
Security-Based Swap Submissions specifies the content of Security-Based 
Swap Submissions, how such Security-Based Swap Submissions shall be 
submitted, and the manner of notice the clearing agency must provide to 
its members regarding such submissions. The Commission also is 
proposing a rule to specify the procedure for staying the clearing 
requirement applicable to a security-based swap, based either on an 
application of a counterparty to a security-based swap or on the 
Commission's own initiative, until the Commission completes a review of 
the terms of the security-based swap and the clearing arrangement. The 
Commission is sensitive to the costs and benefits that would result 
from the proposed rules and has identified certain costs and benefits 
of the proposal, which are discussed more fully below.
1. Processes for Security-Based Swap Submissions for Review
    Pursuant to Exchange Act Section 3C, a clearing agency must submit 
to the Commission each security-based swap, or any group, category, 
type or class of security-based swaps, that the clearing agency plans 
to accept for clearing. The Commission is required to review each 
Security-Based Swap Submission and determine whether the security-based 
swap, or any group, category, type or class of security-based swaps, 
described in the submission is required to be cleared. In reviewing a 
Security-Based Swap Submission, the Commission is required to review 
whether the Security-Based Swap Submission is consistent with Exchange 
Act Section 17A, and must take into account the following factors:
    (i) The existence of significant outstanding notional exposures, 
trading liquidity and adequate pricing data.
    (ii) The availability of a rule framework, capacity, operational 
expertise and resources, and credit support infrastructure to clear the 
contract on terms that are consistent with the material terms and 
trading conventions on which the contact is then traded.
    (iii) The effect on the mitigation of systemic risk, taking into 
account the size of the market for such contract and the resources of 
the clearing agency available to clear the contract.
    (iv) The effect on competition, including appropriate fees and 
charges applied to clearing.
    (v) The existence of reasonable legal certainty in the event of the 
insolvency of the relevant clearing agency or one or more of its 
clearing members with regard to the treatment of customer and security-
based swap counterparty positions, funds, and property.
    Additionally, Exchange Act Section 3C requires, in general, that 
the rules of a clearing agency provide for open access, specifically 
requiring that the rules:
    (a) Prescribe that all security-based swaps submitted to the 
clearing agency with the same terms and conditions are economically 
equivalent within the clearing agency and may be offset with each other 
within the clearing agency; and
    (b) Provide for non-discriminatory clearing of a security-based 
swap executed bilaterally or on or through the rules of an unaffiliated 
national securities exchange or security-based swap execution facility.
    Pursuant to Exchange Act Section 3C, the Commission is required to 
make available to the public any Security-Based Swap Submission and 
provide at least a 30-day public comment period. The Commission is 
required to make its determination not later than 90 days after 
receiving the Security-Based Swap Submission, unless the submitting 
clearing agency agrees to an extension.
    The proposed rule would require that the clearing agency include in 
each Security-Based Swap Submission information that will assist the 
Commission in reviewing the Security-Based Swap Submission for 
consistency with Section 17A and meeting the statutory requirements set 
forth above in items (i)-(v). Additionally, the proposed rule would 
require that the clearing agency specify how the clearing agency's 
rules for open access (set forth in items (a) and (b) above) are 
applicable to the security-based swap described in the Security-Based 
Swap Submission.

[[Page 82514]]

The proposed rule would specify that a clearing agency submit security-
based swaps to the Commission for review by group, category, type or 
class to the extent reasonable and practicable to do so.
    In addition, the Commission is proposing how Security-Based Swap 
Submissions shall be submitted by clearing agencies. Because the 
Commission preliminarily believes that there likely will be significant 
overlap between filings under Exchange Act Section 19(b) and Rule 19b-4 
regarding proposed rule changes and Security-Based Swap Submissions, 
the Commission is proposing that Security-Based Swap Submissions be 
filed on Form 19b-4. In many cases, a Security-Based Swap Submission 
also will be a proposed rule change for purposes of Exchange Act 
Section 19(b).\139\
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    \139\ As discussed in section II.A.1 of this release, the 
Commission anticipates that registered clearing agencies, as SROs, 
often will be required to file a proposed rule change pursuant to 
Exchange Act Section 19(b) in connection with clearing a security-
based swap, or any group, type, category or class of security-based 
swaps, and, at the same time, will be required to make a related 
Security-Based Swap Submission for a determination by the Commission 
of whether such security-based swap (or group, category, type or 
class of security-based swaps) is required to be cleared. A proposed 
rule change constitutes a change in a ``stated policy, practice, or 
interpretation'' of an SRO rule. The definition of a ``stated 
policy, practice, or interpretation'' in Exchange Act Section 19(b) 
includes, among other things, ``any material aspect of the operation 
of the facilities of the SRO; or any statement made generally 
available to the membership of, to all participants in, or to 
persons having or seeking access * * * to facilities of, the self-
regulatory organization (``specified persons''), or to a group or 
category of specified persons, that establishes or changes any 
standard, limit, or guideline with respect to (1) the rights, 
obligations, or privileges of specified persons * * *; or (2) the 
meaning, administration, or enforcement of an existing rule.'' 17 
CFR 240.19b-4(b). In cases where accepting a security-based swap (or 
group, category, type or class of security-based swaps) for clearing 
constitutes a change in a ``stated policy, practice, or 
interpretation'' of the clearing agency, the clearing agency also 
would be required to file a proposed rule change.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The proposed rule provides that a clearing agency must provide 
notice to its members of a Security-Based Swap Submission and any 
amendments thereto, by posting the submission on its Web site within 
two business days. The proposed rule further requires the clearing 
agency to maintain this information on its Web site until the 
Commission makes a determination regarding the Security-Based Swap 
Submission, the clearing agency withdraws the submission, or the 
clearing agency is notified that the submission was not properly filed.
a. Benefits
    The proposed rule is designed to implement the submission and 
notice requirements in Exchange Act Section 3C. The Commission 
anticipates that the proposed rule would further the purposes of 
Exchange Act Section 3C by facilitating the filing and regulatory 
review of Security-Based Swap Submissions and reduce costs to filers by 
utilizing a format that clearing agencies may be familiar with or, as 
they become registered clearing agencies, that they will be required to 
use for all proposed rule changes, Form 19b-4. In addition, the 
proposed rule would further reduce costs to filers by avoiding a 
duplication of efforts in providing notice to members of the clearing 
agency, as well as other interested persons, such as counterparties to 
security-based swaps, through requiring posting of the Security-Based 
Swap Submission on the clearing agency's Web site within two business 
days of filing with the Commission. The Commission anticipates this 
prompt notice would provide the clearing agency members and other 
interested persons with the opportunity to comment on the submission 
with the potential for providing new information about the suitability 
of the security-based swap for clearing.
    The Commission anticipates the proposed rule requiring the clearing 
agency to provide information the Commission requires to review 
Security-Based Swap Submissions would reduce the cost of acquiring 
necessary information. Requiring the clearing agency to provide 
necessary information would ensure that the information used by the 
Commission to evaluate the security-based swap for mandatory clearing 
is correct and complete, reducing the likelihood that further 
information requests will be required.
    Proposed Rule 19b-4(o)(4) requires a clearing agency to submit 
security-based swaps to the Commission for review by group, category, 
type or class of security-based swaps, to the extent reasonable and 
practicable to do so. The Commission preliminarily believes a broad 
interpretation of what constitutes a group, category, type or class of 
security-based swaps is likely to provide benefits to clearing agencies 
and the Commission. Specifically, it would likely lower the costs 
associated with the Security-Based Swap Submission process since 
clearing agencies would be burdened with preparing fewer Security-Based 
Swap Submissions, and the Commission would be required to process and 
review fewer submissions.
b. Costs
    Form 19b-4 is currently used by registered clearing agencies to 
file notice of proposed rule changes under Exchange Act Section 19(b) 
and any clearing agency that becomes registered will be required to use 
Form 19b-4 for all proposed rule changes. Accordingly, clearing 
agencies would be familiar with the electronic filing process in place 
for Form 19b-4 and their staffs would not be required to learn a new 
filing system. In addition, clearing agencies would be able to submit a 
change that is both a proposed rule change under Exchange Act Section 
19(b) and a Security-Based Swap Submission in the same filing. Although 
there are additional information requirements for a Security-Based Swap 
Submission, clearing agencies would be able to provide the required 
information as part of the Form 19b-4 submission.
    More importantly, the Commission preliminarily believes much of the 
information the clearing agency provides in a Security-based Swap 
Submission would be the same as information the clearing agency 
collected and analyzed in making its business decision to plan to 
accept the security-based swap, or any group, category, type, or class 
of security-based swaps, for clearing. The Commission preliminarily 
believes that the clearing agency may incur costs in presenting this 
information in a clear and coherent manner in the format as required 
under the proposed rule.
    As previously discussed in the PRA analysis in Section IV, the 
proposed amendments to Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4 will require a 
clearing agency to submit for a Commission determination, any security-
based swap, or any group, category, type or class of security-based 
swaps that the clearing agency plans to accept for clearing. The 
Commission preliminarily estimates that the total annual reporting 
burden for clearing agencies to internally prepare, review and submit 
Security-Based Swap Submissions electronically with the Commission 
under the proposed amendments to Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4 will be 
24,000 hours; this figure includes 7,200 hours of outside legal work. 
Assuming an hourly cost of $320 for an in-house compliance 
attorney,\140\ and an hourly cost of $354 for an outside attorney,\141\ 
these requirements

[[Page 82515]]

would result in a total annual cost of $7,924,800 in the aggregate for 
the six respondent clearing agencies (16,800 hours x $320 per hour for 
a compliance attorney) + (7,200 hours x $354 per hour for an outside 
attorney).
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    \140\ The hourly rate for a compliance attorney is from SIFMA's 
Management & Professional Earnings in the Securities Industry 2010, 
modified by the Commission's staff to account for an 1800-hour work-
year and multiplied by 5.35 to account for bonuses, firm size, 
employee benefits and overhead.
    \141\ See supra note 129.
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    The Commission preliminarily estimates that there would be a one-
time burden of 780 hours for all newly-registered clearing agencies to 
draft and implement internal policies and procedures related to using 
EFFS to submit Security-Based Swap Submissions, Advance Notices and 
proposed rule changes with the Commission. Assuming an hourly cost of 
$320 for an in-house compliance attorney,\142\ these requirements would 
result in a total one-time cost of $249,600 in the aggregate for the 
six respondent clearing agencies (780 hours x $320 per hour for an in-
house compliance attorney).
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    \142\ See supra note 140.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Commission also preliminarily estimates that there would be a 
one-time burden of 120 hours for all currently-registered clearing 
agencies to draft and implement modifications to existing internal 
policies and procedures for using EFFS in order to update them for the 
submission of Security-Based Swap Submissions and/or Advance Notices 
with the Commission. Assuming an hourly cost of $320 for an in-house 
compliance attorney,\143\ these requirements would result in a one-time 
cost of $38,400 in the aggregate for the four respondent clearing 
agencies (120 hours x $320 per hour for an in-house compliance 
attorney).
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    \143\ See supra note 140.
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    The Commission preliminarily believes that newly-registered 
clearing agencies could incur some one-time costs associated with 
training their personnel about the procedures for submitting Security-
Based Swap Submissions and/or Advance Notices in electronic format 
through EFFS. The Commission preliminarily estimates that six newly-
registered clearing agencies would incur a one-time upfront burden of 
120 hours to train clearing agency staff members to use EFFS to submit 
Security-Based Swap Submissions, Advance Notices and/or proposed rule 
changes electronically. The Commission preliminarily estimates that 
after the initial year, existing SROs (including currently-registered 
clearing agencies) would spend approximately 290 hours annually 
training new staff members and updating the training of existing staff 
members to use EFFS. Assuming an hourly cost of $259 for a senior 
systems analyst,\144\ these requirements would result in an overall 
estimated initial annual cost of $31,080 in the aggregate for the six 
newly-registered clearing agencies (120 hours x $259 per hour for a 
senior systems analyst) and an annual cost after the initial year of 
$75,110 thereafter in the aggregate for all SROs (290 hours x $259 per 
hour for a senior systems analyst).
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    \144\ The hourly rate for a senior systems analyst is from 
SIFMA's Management & Professional Earnings in the Securities 
Industry 2010, modified by the Commission's staff to account for an 
1800-hour work-year and multiplied by 5.35 to account for bonuses, 
firm size, employee benefits and overhead.
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    Pursuant to existing Rule 19b-4(l), each SRO is required to post on 
its Web site a copy of any proposed rule change the SRO filed with the 
Commission and any amendments thereto. The proposed rule to implement 
the submission and notice requirements in Exchange Act Section 3C 
includes a similar posting requirement for Security-Based Swap 
Submissions. The Commission preliminary estimates that the total annual 
reporting burden for clearing agencies to post Security-Based Swap 
Submissions on their Web sites would be 480 hours. Assuming an hourly 
cost of $225 for a Webmaster,\145\ these requirements would result in a 
total estimated annual cost of $108,000 in the aggregate for the six 
respondent clearing agencies (480 hours x $225 per hour for a 
Webmaster).
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    \145\ The hourly rate for a Webmaster is from SIFMA's Management 
& Professional Earnings in the Securities Industry 2010, modified by 
the Commission's staff to account for an 1800-hour work-year and 
multiplied by 5.35 to account for bonuses, firm size, employee 
benefits and overhead.
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    Some Security-Based Swap Submissions would be required to be filed 
only as Security-Based Swap Submissions under Exchange Act Section 3C 
and not as proposed rule changes under Exchange Act Section 19(b), for 
example where a clearing agency's rules already permit it to clear the 
security-based swap in question. As a result, clearing agencies would 
incur additional costs by filing a greater number of forms than they do 
currently under Exchange Act Section 19(b).
2. Staying a Clearing Requirement While the Clearing of the Security-
Based Swap Is Reviewed
    Under Exchange Act Section 3C, after making a determination that a 
security-based swap (or group, category, type or class of security-
based swaps) is required to be cleared, the Commission, on application 
of a counterparty to a security-based swap or on the Commission's own 
initiative, may stay the clearing requirement until the Commission 
completes a review of the terms of the security-based swap and the 
clearing arrangement.\146\ In connection with a stay of the clearing 
requirement, the Commission is required to adopt rules for reviewing a 
clearing agency's clearing of a security-based swap, or any group, 
category, type or class of security-based swaps, that the clearing 
agency has accepted for clearing.
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    \146\ See Public Law 111-203, section 763(a) (adding Exchange 
Act Section 3C(c)(1)).
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    Under proposed Rule 3Ca-1, a counterparty to a security-based swap 
subject to the clearing requirement who applies for a stay of the 
clearing requirement would be required to submit a written statement to 
the Commission that includes a request for a stay of the clearing 
requirement; the identity of the counterparties to the security-based 
swap and a contact at the counterparty requesting the stay; the 
identity of the clearing agency clearing the security-based swap; the 
terms of the security-based swap subject to the clearing requirement 
and a description of the clearing arrangement; and the reasons why a 
stay should be granted and why the security-based swap should not be 
subject to a clearing requirement, specifically addressing the same 
factors a clearing agency must address in its Security-Based-Swap 
Submission pursuant to proposed Rule 19b-4(o).\147\ The proposed rule 
also provides that any clearing agency that has accepted for clearing a 
security-based swap that is subject to the stay shall provide 
information requested by the Commission necessary to assess any of the 
factors it determines to be appropriate in the course of its review.
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    \147\ Proposed Rule 3Ca-1(b).
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a. Benefits
    The Commission preliminarily believes that the proposed rule 
provides benefits in creating an efficient mechanism for collecting 
information to be used in the Commission's determination to grant the 
requested stay and subsequent review of the clearing requirement. 
Specifically, the counterparty will provide information specifically 
within its possession--reasons why the stay should be granted and why 
the security-based swap should not be subject to a clearing 
requirement. Additionally, any information requested from the clearing 
agency likely will include information unique to the clearing agency 
and will facilitate the Commission's review of the clearing requirement 
subject to the stay.

[[Page 82516]]

b. Costs
    The proposed rule requires a counterparty requesting a stay provide 
basic identifying information and information supporting its request 
for a stay and its position that the security-based swap should not be 
subject to a clearing requirement. With respect to the proposed rule's 
requirement that a clearing agency shall provide information requested 
by the Commission necessary to assess any of the factors it determines 
to be appropriate in the course of its review, the Commission 
preliminarily believes this information will likely be information the 
clearing agency has in its possession, including updates of information 
provided in the related Security-Based Swap Submission. The Commission 
preliminarily estimates that each clearing agency would receive five 
applications per annum to stay the clearing requirement. The Commission 
also preliminarily estimates that the total annual reporting burden for 
the six respondent clearing agencies to compile and provide the 
information requested by the Commission in connection with the review 
of the stay of clearing applications would be 750 hours; this figure 
includes 210 hours of outside legal work. Assuming an hourly cost of 
$320 for an in-house compliance attorney,\148\ and an hourly cost of 
$354 for an outside attorney,\149\ these requirements would result in a 
total estimated annual cost of $247,140 in the aggregate for the six 
respondent clearing agencies (540 hours x $320 per hour for a 
compliance attorney) + (210 hours x $354 per hour for an attorney).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \148\ See supra note 140.
    \149\ See supra note 129.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Finally, the Commission preliminarily estimates that 100 hours 
would be required by a counterparty to a security-based swap to prepare 
and submit an application requesting a stay of the clearing 
requirement. The Commission also preliminarily estimates that 
counterparties to security-based swaps transactions would submit 30 
applications requesting stays of the clearing requirement. Assuming an 
hourly cost of $354 for an outside attorney, the total annual cost in 
the aggregate for the respondent counterparties to meet these 
requirements would be $1,062,000 (100 hours x $354 per hour for an 
outside attorney x 30 stay of clearing applications).
    The Commission requests that commenters provide views and 
supporting information regarding the costs and benefits associated with 
the proposed rules relating to Security-Based Swap submissions and stay 
of the clearing requirement and related review. The Commission seeks 
estimates of these costs and benefits, as well as any costs and 
benefits not already identified. The Commission also requests comment 
on whether other provisions of the Dodd-Frank Act for which Commission 
rulemaking is required are likely to have an effect on the costs and 
benefits of the proposed rules.

B. Advance Notices Required Under Section 806(e)

    Congress has mandated that the Commission adopt rules to define 
when proposed changes to a designated clearing agency's rules, 
procedures or operations could materially affect the nature or level of 
risks presented by the clearing agency. The proposed rule would 
determine when notice of such changes must be filed with the Commission 
and would prescribe how such notices shall be filed. The Commission is 
sensitive to the costs and benefits that would result from the proposed 
rule and has identified certain costs and benefits of the proposal, 
which are discussed more fully below.
1. Benefits
    Pursuant to Section 806(e), any registered clearing agency 
designated as a systemically important financial market utility and for 
which the Commission is the Supervisory Agency will be required to file 
with the Commission advance notice of proposed changes to its rules, 
procedures or operations that could materially affect the nature or 
level of risks presented by the clearing agency. The proposed rule 
would reduce regulatory uncertainty pertaining to the filing 
requirement in Section 806(e) by defining the term ``materially affect 
the nature or level of risks presented'' with respect to a change to 
rules, procedures, or operations. The term would be defined as a matter 
as to which there is a reasonable possibility that the change could 
affect the performance of essential clearing and settlement functions 
or the overall nature or level of risk presented by the designated 
clearing agency. Such changes would include, but are not limited to, 
changes that materially affect participant and product eligibility, 
risk management, daily or intraday settlement procedures, default 
procedures, system safeguards, governance or financial resources of the 
designated financial market utility. However, such changes generally 
would exclude changes to an existing procedure, control, or service 
that do not modify the rights or obligations of the designated 
financial market utility or persons using its payment, clearing, or 
settlement services and that do not adversely affect the safeguarding 
of securities, collateral, or funds in the custody or control of the 
designated financial market utility or for which it is responsible, or 
changes concerned solely with the administration of the designated 
financial market utility or related to the routine, daily 
administration, direction, and control of employees.\150\
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    \150\ Proposed Rule 19b-4(n)(2)(iii).
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    The Commission also is proposing to facilitate the compliance with 
the filing requirement in Section 806(e) by prescribing how Advance 
Notices of proposed changes to rules, procedures or operations shall be 
filed by designated clearing agencies. Because the requirement to file 
notice under Section 806(e) is similar to the filing requirement for 
proposed rule changes under Exchange Act Section 19(b), the Commission 
is proposing that Advance Notices be filed on Form 19b-4. In many 
cases, it is likely that a proposed change for purposes of Section 
806(e) will also be a proposed rule change for purposes of Exchange Act 
Section 19(b), reducing costs associated with multiple filings.
    The proposed rule is designed to implement the filing requirement 
in Section 806(e) and to establish criteria for designated clearing 
agencies regarding when notices shall be filed and the method for 
filing such notices. The Commission preliminarily believes that the 
proposed rule would lower the costs of filing and regulatory review of 
proposed changes that could materially affect the nature or level of 
risks presented by systemically important clearing institutions. In 
addition, the proposed rule is intended to provide the public with the 
opportunity to comment on such proposals by designated clearing 
agencies. The Commission preliminarily believes the proposed rule would 
help to assure that the additional information required under Section 
806(e) is provided through amendments to the existing Form 19b-4. 
However, a filing submitted under both Section 806(e) and Exchange Act 
Section 19(b) would be required to satisfy the standards under both 
sections in order to become effective.
2. Costs
    The Commission preliminarily believes the costs associated with the 
proposed rule should not be significant for designated clearing 
agencies. Form 19b-4 is currently used by registered clearing agencies 
to file notice of

[[Page 82517]]

proposed rule changes under Exchange Act Section 19(b). Accordingly, 
designated clearing agencies would be familiar with the filing process 
in Form 19b-4, and staffs would not be required to learn a new filing 
system. In addition, clearing agencies would be able to submit a change 
that is both a proposed rule change under Exchange Act Section 19(b) 
and a proposed change under Section 806(e) in the same filing. Although 
there are additional information requirements for a Section 806(e) 
filing, designated clearing agencies would be able to provide the 
required information as part of the Form 19b-4 submission.
    Some proposed changes may be required to be filed only as Advance 
Notices under Section 806(e) and not as proposed rule changes under 
Exchange Act Section 19(b). As a result, the Commission preliminarily 
believes clearing agencies will incur additional costs by filing a 
greater number of forms than they do currently under Exchange Act 
Section 19(b). Based on informal comments from clearing agencies, the 
Commission preliminarily estimates that each designated clearing agency 
will file 35 Advance Notices with the Commission annually at a cost of 
$3,200 per submission (10 hours x compliance attorney at $320 per hour) 
or $1,120,000 ($3200 x 35 Advance Notices x 10 respondent clearing 
agencies) in the aggregate for the ten respondent clearing agencies.
    Proposed Rule 19b-4(n)(3) requires designated clearing agencies to 
post copies of Advance Notices filed with the Commission on their Web 
sites. The Commission estimates that the total annual reporting burden 
for designated clearing agencies to post Advance Notices on their Web 
sites would be 1400 hours. Assuming an hourly cost of $225 for a 
Webmaster,\151\ these requirements would result in an estimated annual 
cost of $315,000 in the aggregate for the ten respondent clearing 
agencies (1400 hours x $225 per hour for a Webmaster).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \151\ See supra note 145.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Proposed Rule 19b-4(n)(4) requires a designated clearing agency to 
post notice on its Web site of any change to its rules, procedures or 
operations referred to in an Advance Notice once it has been permitted 
to take effect. The Commission estimates that the total annual 
reporting burden for designated clearing agencies to post notice on 
their Web sites of any change to their rules, procedures or operations 
referred to in Advance Notices once they take effect would be 1400 
hours. Assuming an hourly cost of $225 for a Webmaster,\152\ these 
requirements would result in an estimated annual cost of $315,000 in 
the aggregate for the ten respondent clearing agencies (1400 hours x 
$225 per hour for a Webmaster).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \152\ See supra note 145.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

C. Amendment To Conform to Section 916 of the Dodd-Frank Act

    The Commission preliminarily estimates that the requirement that an 
SRO inform the Commission of the date on which it posted a proposed 
rule change on its Web site (if the posting did not occur on the same 
day that the SRO filed the proposal with the Commission) will impose 
only a minimal burden, if any, on an SRO. As discussed in Section 
IV.B.4., the Commission preliminarily believes that SROs currently post 
their proposed rule changes on their Web site on the same day on which 
they file them with the Commission. It would be an unlikely occurrence 
for an SRO to fail to post its proposed rule change on the same day 
that it files with the Commission, since prompt Web site posting 
triggers the requirement on the Commission to publish notice of the 
proposed rule change.
    The Commission preliminarily estimates that SROs will fail to post 
proposed rule changes on their Web sites on the same day as the filing 
was made with the Commission in 1% of all cases, or 14 times each year, 
and that each SRO will spend approximately one hour preparing and 
submitting notice to the Commission of the date on which it posted the 
proposed rule change on its Web site, resulting in a total annual 
burden of 14 hours. Assuming an hourly cost of $320 for an in-house 
compliance attorney,\153\ this requirement would result in a total 
estimated annual cost of $4,480 in the aggregate for all SROs (14 hours 
x $320 per hour for a compliance attorney) in the aggregate for all 
SROs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \153\ See supra note 140.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Commission requests that commenters provide views and 
supporting information regarding the costs and benefits associated with 
the proposals. The Commission seeks estimates of these costs and 
benefits, as well as any costs and benefits not already identified. The 
Commission also requests comment on whether other provisions of the 
Dodd-Frank Act for which Commission rulemaking is required are likely 
to have an effect on the costs and benefits of the proposed rules.

VI. Consideration of Burden on Competition and Promotion of Efficiency, 
Competition and Capital Formation

    Exchange Act Section 23(a) \154\ requires the Commission, when 
making rules and regulations under the Exchange Act, to consider the 
impact a new rule would have on competition. Exchange Act Section 
23(a)(2) prohibits the Commission from adopting any rule that would 
impose a burden on competition not necessary or appropriate in 
furtherance of the purposes of the Exchange Act. Section 2(b) of the 
Securities Act of 1933 \155\ and Exchange Act Section 3(f) \156\ 
require the Commission, when engaging in rulemaking that requires it to 
consider whether an action is necessary or appropriate in the public 
interest, to consider, in addition to the protection of investors, 
whether the action would promote efficiency, competition, and capital 
formation. Below, the Commission addresses these issues for the 
amendments to Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4 to reflect the use of these 
forms for filing Security-Based Swap Submissions and Advance Notices, 
and proposed Rule 3Ca-1 to facilitate the process for staying the 
clearing requirement applicable to a security-based swap until the 
Commission completes a review of the terms of the security-based swap 
and the clearing arrangement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \154\ 15 U.S.C. 78w(a).
    \155\ 15 U.S.C. 77b(b).
    \156\ 15 U.S.C. 78c(f).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

A. Proposed Amendments to Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4

    The proposed amendments to Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4 are designed 
to facilitate the statutorily mandated processes for submitting 
Security-Based Swap Submissions and Advance Notices to the Commission, 
and to make each process efficient by utilizing the existing process 
and EFFS infrastructure for proposed rule changes. Using an existing 
process to accomplish an additional legislative requirement would 
conserve both clearing agency and Commission resources. If amended, 
Form 19b-4 would enable clearing agencies to submit Security-Based Swap 
Submissions, and any amendments thereto, and any Advance Notices 
electronically to the Commission. Submitting Security-Based Swap 
Submissions and Advance Notices in this manner would impose fewer costs 
on clearing agencies and the Commission when compared to requiring 
clearing agencies to use new infrastructure or business processes to

[[Page 82518]]

make Security-Based Swap Submissions or Advance Notices.
    The proposed requirement that the clearing agency aggregate 
security-based swaps into groups, categories, types or classes to the 
extent reasonable and practicable to do so, in each Security-Based Swap 
Submission likely would appropriately streamline the submission process 
for Commission staff and clearing agencies (i.e., such aggregations 
would decrease the number of Security-Based Swap Submissions each 
clearing agency would prepare and submit, and accordingly, the 
Commission would review). This requirement is intended to make the 
Security-Based Swap Submission process more efficient.
    The proposed amendments to Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4 also are 
intended to improve the transparency of security-based swaps 
transactions. The proposed amendments to Rule 19b-4 would require a 
clearing agency to post on its Web site any Security-Based Swap 
Submissions and any amendments thereto, it submitted to the Commission 
within two business days of submission to the Commission, to fulfill 
the statutory requirement that clearing agencies provide notice to 
their members of such submissions. The Commission preliminarily 
believes that public Web site posting of Security-Based Swap 
Submissions may promote competition among security-based swap clearing 
agencies because it will make it easier (and more timely) for clearing 
agencies to be able to determine the security-based swaps their 
competitors intend to clear and analyze whether they too wish to clear 
such security-based swap.
    Similarly, the proposed amendments to Rule 19b-4 would require a 
designated clearing agency to post on its Web site proposed changes to 
its rules, procedures, or operations that trigger the Section 806(e) 
advance notice requirement and a description of the subjects and issues 
involved within two business days of the submission of an Advance 
Notice to the Commission. A designated clearing agency also will be 
required to post a notice on its Web site of the effectiveness of any 
change to its rules, procedures, or operations referred to in an 
Advance Notice within two business days of the effective date, as 
monitored by the designated clearing agency and determined in 
accordance with Section 806(e). The Commission preliminarily believes 
that public Web site posting of this information may promote 
competition and transparency among clearing agencies by giving 
interested persons an opportunity to submit written data, views, and 
arguments concerning proposed changes that could materially affect the 
nature or level of risks presented by a designated clearing agency.
    The proposed amendments to Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4 with respect 
to the information that clearing agencies are required to provide are 
intended to facilitate the Commission's review process for Security-
Based Swap Submissions and Advance Notices and to make the process 
efficient by requiring information the clearing agency is uniquely 
qualified to provide and likely may already have available.
    The Commission preliminarily believes none of the proposed 
amendments to Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4 would have an adverse impact on 
competition or capital formation, but instead should increase 
confidence in the robustness of the security-based swap market, 
encouraging participation and allowing better risk management 
practices. To the extent that security-based swaps mitigate the risk 
associated with capital raising activities, increased investor 
confidence and use of security-based swaps should foster more efficient 
capital formation and thereby benefit issuers and investors.
    Proposed Rule 3Ca-1 is designed to facilitate the statutorily 
mandated process for staying the clearing requirement applicable to a 
security-based swap until the Commission completes a review of the 
terms of the security-based swap and the clearing arrangement. The 
proposed rule is designed to create an efficient mechanism for 
collecting information to be used in the Commission's determination to 
grant the requested stay and subsequent review of the clearing 
requirement.
    The Commission has not identified any effects on competition or 
capital formation of the process specified in proposed Rule 3Ca-1. The 
Commission preliminarily believes proposed Rule 3Ca-1 would not have an 
adverse impact on competition or capital formation.
    The Commission generally requests comment on the competitive or 
anticompetitive effects of the proposed amendments to Rule 19b-4 and 
Form 19b-4 on any market participants if adopted as proposed. The 
Commission also requests comment on what impact the amendments, if 
adopted, would have on efficiency and capital formation. The Commission 
requests that commenters provide analysis and empirical data, if 
available, to support their views regarding any such effects. The 
Commission notes that such effects may be difficult to quantify. The 
Commission also requests comment regarding the competitive effects of 
pursuing alternative regulatory approaches that are consistent with 
Exchange Act Section 3C, as added by Section 763(a) of the Dodd-Frank 
Act. In addition, the Commission requests comment on how the other 
provisions of the Dodd-Frank Act for which Commission rulemaking is 
required, will interact with and influence the competitive effects of 
the proposed amendments to Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4.

VII. Consideration of Impact on the Economy

    For purposes of the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness 
Act of 1996 (``SBREFA''),\157\ the Commission must advise the OMB as to 
whether the proposed rule constitutes a ``major'' rule. Under SBREFA, a 
rule is considered ``major'' where, if adopted, it results or is likely 
to result in: (i) An annual effect on the economy of $100 million or 
more (either in the form of an increase or a decrease); (ii) a major 
increase in costs or prices for consumers or individual industries; or 
(iii) significant adverse effect on competition, investment or 
innovation. If a rule is ``major,'' its effectiveness will generally be 
delayed for sixty days pending Congressional review.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \157\ Public Law 104-121, Title II, 110 Stat. 857 (1996) 
(codified in various sections of 5 U.S.C., 15 U.S.C. and as a note 
to 5 U.S.C. 601).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Commission requests comment on the potential impact of the 
amendments to Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4 and new Rules 3Ca-1 and 3Ca-2 
on the economy on an annual basis, any potential increase in costs or 
prices for consumers or individual industries, and any potential effect 
on competition, investment or innovation. Commenters are requested to 
provide empirical data and other factual support for their view to the 
extent possible.

VIII. Regulatory Flexibility Certification

    The Regulatory Flexibility Act (``RFA'') \158\ requires the 
Commission, in promulgating rules, to consider the impact of those 
rules on small entities. Section 603(a) \159\ of the Administrative 
Procedure Act,\160\ as amended by the RFA, generally requires the 
Commission to undertake a regulatory flexibility analysis of all 
proposed rules to determine the impact of such rulemaking on ``small 
entities.'' \161\

[[Page 82519]]

Section 605(b) of the RFA states that this requirement shall not apply 
to any proposed rule which, if adopted, would not have a significant 
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.\162\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \158\ 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.
    \159\ 5 U.S.C. 603(a).
    \160\ 5 U.S.C. 551 et seq.
    \161\ Section 601(b) of the RFA permits agencies to formulate 
their own definitions of ``small entities.'' The Commission has 
adopted definitions for the term ``small entity'' for the purposes 
of rulemaking in accordance with the RFA. These definitions, as 
relevant to this proposed rulemaking, are set forth in Rule 0-10, 17 
CFR 240.0-10.
    \162\ See 5 U.S.C. 605(b).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

A. Clearing Agencies

    The amendments to Rule 19b-4 would apply to (i) all clearing 
agencies that clear security-based swaps and (ii) all designated 
clearing agencies. Proposed Rules 3Ca-1 and 3Ca-2 would apply to all 
security-based swap clearing agencies. Four entities are currently 
exempt from registration as a clearing agency under Exchange Act 
Section 17A to provide central clearing services for CDS, a class of 
security-based swaps.\163\ The Commission preliminarily believes, based 
on its understanding of the market, that likely no more than six 
security-based swap clearing agencies could be subject to the 
requirements of the proposed amendments to Rule 19b-4 and proposed 
Rules 3Ca-1 and 3Ca-2. In addition, the Commission preliminarily 
believes that approximately ten registered clearing agencies could be 
designated by the Council as systemically important (and for which the 
Commission will be the Supervisory Agency), which includes the four 
existing securities clearing agencies and the six estimated clearing 
agencies that may clear security-based swaps.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \163\ See CDS Clearing Exemption Orders, supra note 122.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    For the purposes of Commission rulemaking in connection with the 
RFA, a small entity includes, when used with reference to a clearing 
agency, a clearing agency that: (i) Compared, cleared and settled less 
than $500 million in securities transactions during the preceding 
fiscal year; (ii) had less than $200 million of funds and securities in 
its custody or control at all times during the preceding fiscal year 
(or at any time that it has been in business, if shorter); and (iii) is 
not affiliated with any person (other than a natural person) that is 
not a small business or small organization.\164\ Under the standards 
adopted by the Small Business Administration, small entities in the 
finance industry include the following: (i) For entities engaged in 
investment banking, securities dealing and securities brokerage 
activities, entities with $6.5 million or less in annual receipts; (ii) 
for entities engaged in trust, fiduciary and custody activities, 
entities with $6.5 million or less in annual receipts; and (iii) funds, 
trusts and other financial vehicles with $6.5 million or less in annual 
receipts.\165\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \164\ 17 CFR 240.0-10(d).
    \165\ 13 CFR 121.201, Sector 52.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Based on the Commission's existing information about the entities 
likely to register to clear security-based swaps, the Commission 
preliminarily believes that such entities will not be small entities, 
but rather part of large business entities that exceed the thresholds 
defining ``small entities'' set out above. Additionally, while other 
clearing agencies may become eligible to operate as central 
counterparties for security-based swaps, the Commission preliminarily 
does not believe that any such entities would be ``small entities'' as 
defined in Exchange Act Rule 0-10.\166\ Furthermore, we believe it is 
unlikely that clearing agencies acting as central counterparties for 
security-based swaps would have annual receipts of less than $6.5 
million. Accordingly, the Commission believes that any clearing 
agencies clearing security-based swaps by acting as central 
counterparties for such transactions will exceed the thresholds for 
``small entities'' set forth in Exchange Act Rule 0-12.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \166\ See 17 CFR 240.0-10(d).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

B. Security-Based Swap Counterparties

    Proposed Rule 3Ca-1 would apply to any counterparty to a security-
based swap subject to the clearing requirement that applies for a stay 
of the clearing requirement. For the purposes of Commission rulemaking 
and as applicable to this proposed Rule 3Ca-1, a small entity includes: 
(i) When used with reference to a clearing agency, a clearing agency 
that (a) compared, cleared and settled less than $500 million in 
securities transactions during the preceding fiscal year, (b) had less 
than $200 million of funds and securities in its custody or control at 
all times during the preceding fiscal year (or at any time that it has 
been in business, if shorter) and (c) is not affiliated with any person 
(other than a natural person) that is not a small business or small 
organization; \167\ (ii) when used as reference to an ``issuer'' or a 
``person,'' other than an investment company, an ``issuer'' or a 
``person'' that, on the last day of its most recent fiscal year, had 
total assets of $5 million or less; \168\ or (iii) when used as 
reference to broker-dealer, a broker-dealer (a) with total capital (net 
worth plus subordinated liabilities) of less than $500,000 on the date 
in the prior fiscal year as of which its audited financial statements 
were prepared pursuant to Rule 17a-5(d) under the Exchange Act, or, if 
not required to file such statements, a broker-dealer that had total 
capital (net worth plus subordinated liabilities) of less than $500,000 
on the last business day of the preceding fiscal year (or in that time 
that it has been in business, if shorter) and (b) is not affiliated 
with any person (other than a natural person) that is not a small 
business or small organization.\169\ Under the standards adopted by the 
Small Business Administration, small entities in the finance industry 
include the following: (i) For entities engaged in investment banking, 
securities dealing and securities brokerage activities, entities with 
$6.5 million or less in annual receipts; (ii) for entities engaged in 
trust, fiduciary and custody activities, entities with $6.5 million or 
less in annual receipts; and (iii) funds, trusts and other financial 
vehicles with $6.5 million or less in annual receipts.\170\
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    \167\ 17 CFR 240.0-10(d).
    \168\ 17 CFR 240.0-10(a).
    \169\ 17 CFR 240.0-10(c).
    \170\ 13 CFR 121.201, Sector 52.
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    With regard to security-based swap transactions that have 
counterparties that may meet the definition of a ``small entity'' under 
Exchange Act Rule 0-10 and, under proposed Rule 3Ca-1, apply to the 
Commission for a stay of the clearing requirement, the Commission 
believes that it is unlikely that the stay application process of 
proposed Rule 3Ca-1 would have a significant economic impact upon such 
an entity. Given that the proposed stay application process entails the 
submission of a written statement to the Commission setting forth 
information about the security-based swap transaction for which the 
stay is sought, the Commission believes the impact of the application 
process on a counterparty would be minimal. Furthermore, even if the 
stay application process were to have a significant economic impact 
upon such non-clearing agency counterparty, the Commission believes 
that the number of entities so impacted would be no more than 30, based 
on the informal discussions between the staff and the clearing 
agencies, in terms of number of stay requests and number of small 
entities making such requests. Accordingly, in respect of non-clearing 
agency counterparties to security-based swap transactions, the 
Commission preliminarily believes that proposed Rule 3Ca-1 would not 
have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small 
entities.

[[Page 82520]]

C. Certification

    For the reasons stated above, the Commission certifies that the 
proposed amendments to Rule 19b-4 and proposed Rules 3Ca-1 and 3Ca-2 
would not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of 
small entities for the purposes of the RFA. The Commission encourages 
written comments regarding this certification. The Commission requests 
that commenters describe the nature of any impact on small entities, 
including clearing agencies eligible to clear security-based swaps, 
designated clearing agencies and counterparties to security-based swap 
transactions, and provide empirical data to support the extent of the 
impact.

IX. Statutory Authority

    Pursuant to the Exchange Act, and particularly Sections 3C, 17A and 
19(b) thereof, 15 U.S.C. 78c-3, 78q-1 and 78s(b) and Section 806(e) of 
the Dodd-Frank Act, 12 U.S.C 5465(e), the Commission proposes to amend 
Rule 19b-4 and Form 19b-4 and add new Rules 3Ca-1 and 3Ca-2, as set 
forth below.

List of Subjects in 17 CFR Parts 240 and 249

    Brokers, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Securities.

Text of the Proposed Rule

    In accordance with the foregoing, Title 17, chapter II of the Code 
of Federal Regulations is proposed to be amended as follows:

PART 240--GENERAL RULES AND REGULATIONS, SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 
1934

    1. The general authority citation for part 240 is revised to read 
as follows:

    Authority: 15 U.S.C. 77c, 77d, 77g, 77j, 77s, 77z-2, 77z-3, 
77eee, 77ggg, 77nnn, 77sss, 77ttt, 78c, 78c-3, 78d, 78e, 78f, 78g, 
78i, 78j, 78j-1, 78k, 78k-1, 78l, 78m, 78n, 78o, 78o-4, 78p, 78q, 
78s, 78u-5, 78w, 78x, 78ll, 78mm, 80a-20, 80a-23, 80a-29, 80a-37, 
80b-3, 80b-4, 80b-11, and 7201 et seq.; 18 U.S.C. 1350 and 12 U.S.C. 
5221(e)(3), unless otherwise noted.
* * * * *
    Section 240.19b-4 is also issued under 12 U.S.C. 5465(e).

    2. Sections 240.3ca-1 and 240.3ca-2 are added following Sec.  
240.3b-19 to read as follows:


Sec.  240.3ca-1  Stay of clearing requirement and review by the 
Commission.

    (a) After making a determination pursuant to a clearing agency's 
security-based swap submission that a security-based swap, or any 
group, category, type or class of security-based swaps, is required to 
be cleared, the Commission, on application of a counterparty to a 
security-based swap or on the Commission's own initiative, may stay the 
clearing requirement until the Commission completes a review of the 
terms of the security-based swap (or group, category, type, or class of 
security-based swaps) and the clearing of the security-based swap (or 
group, category, type, or class of security-based swaps) by the 
clearing agency that has accepted it for clearing.
    (b) A counterparty to a security-based swap applying for a stay of 
the clearing requirement for a security-based swap (or group, category, 
type, or class of security-based swaps) shall submit a written 
statement to the Commission that includes:
    (1) A request for a stay of the clearing requirement;
    (2) The identity of the counterparties to the security-based swap 
and a contact at the counterparty requesting the stay;
    (3) The identity of the clearing agency clearing the security-based 
swap;
    (4) The terms of the security-based swap subject to the clearing 
requirement and a description of the clearing arrangement; and
    (5) Reasons why such stay should be granted and why the security-
based swap should not be subject to a clearing requirement, 
specifically addressing the same factors a clearing agency must address 
in its security-based-swap submission pursuant to Sec.  240.19b-4(o)(3) 
of this chapter.
    (c) A stay of the clearing requirement may be granted with respect 
to a security-based swap, or the group, category, type, or class of 
security-based swaps, as determined by the Commission.
    (d) The Commission's review shall include, but need not be limited 
to, a quantitative and qualitative assessment of the factors specified 
in Sec.  240.19b-4(o)(3) of this chapter. Any clearing agency that has 
accepted for clearing a security-based swap, or any group, category, 
type or class of security-based swaps, that is subject to the stay of 
the clearing requirement shall provide information requested by the 
Commission necessary to assess any of the factors it determines to be 
appropriate in the course of its review.
    (e) Upon completion of its review, the Commission may:
    (1) Determine, subject to any terms and conditions that the 
Commission determines to be appropriate in the public interest, that 
the security-based swap, or group, category, type, or class of 
security-based swaps must be cleared; or
    (2) Determine that the clearing requirement will not apply to the 
security-based swap, or group, category, type, or class of security-
based swaps, but clearing may continue on a non-mandatory basis.


Sec.  240.3ca-2  Submission of security-based swaps for clearing.

    Pursuant to section 3C(a)(1) of the Act (15 U.S.C. 78c-3(a)(1)), it 
shall be unlawful for any person to engage in a security-based swap 
unless that person submits such security-based swap for clearing to a 
clearing agency that is registered under this Act or a clearing agency 
that is exempt from registration under the Act if the security-based 
swap is required to be cleared. The phrase submits such security-based 
swap for clearing to a clearing agency in the clearing requirement of 
Section 3C(a)(1) of the Act shall mean that the security-based swap 
will be submitted for central clearing to a clearing agency that 
functions as a central counterparty.
    3. Sec.  240.19b-4 is amended by:
    a. Removing paragraph (b);
    b. Redesignating paragraph (a) as paragraph (b);
    c. Adding new paragraph (a);
    d. In paragraph (i), by revising the phrase ``of all filings made 
pursuant to this section'' to read ``of all filings, notices and 
submissions made pursuant to this section 240.19b-4'';
    e. In paragraph (i), adding the words ``notice or submission,'' 
after the phrase ``any such filing,'';
    f. In paragraph (i), removing the phrase ``the filing of the 
proposed rule change.'' and adding in its place ``the filing, notice or 
submission of the proposed rule change, advance notice or security-
based swap submission, as applicable.'';
    g. In paragraph (j), first sentence, removing the words ``with 
respect to proposed rule changes'';
    h. In paragraph (k) adding ``240.19b-4'' after the words ``this 
section'';
    i. Revising paragraph (l), introductory paragraph;
    j. In paragraph (l)(4), replacing the phrase ``website'' to read 
``Web site'';
    k. In paragraph (m)(1), replacing the phrase ``website'' to read 
``Web site'';
    l. In paragraph (m)(2), replacing the phrase ``website'' to read 
``Web site'';
    m. In paragraph (m)(3), replacing the phrase ``website'' to read 
``Web site'';
    n. Adding paragraph (n); and
    o. Adding paragraph (o).
    3. The additions and revisions read as follows:


Sec.  240.19b-4  Filings with respect to proposed rule changes by self-
regulatory organizations.

* * * * *

[[Page 82521]]

    (a) Definitions. As used in this Sec.  240.19b-4:
    (1) The term advance notice means a notice required to be made by a 
designated clearing agency pursuant to Section 806(e) of the Payment, 
Clearing and Settlement Supervision Act (12 U.S.C. 5465);
    (2) The term designated clearing agency means a clearing agency 
that is registered with the Commission, and for which the Commission is 
the Supervisory Agency (as determined in accordance with section 803(8) 
of the Payment, Clearing and Settlement Supervision Act), that has been 
designated by the Financial Stability Oversight Council pursuant to 
section 804 of the Payment, Clearing and Settlement Supervision Act (12 
U.S.C. 5463) as systemically important or likely to become systemically 
important;
    (3) The term Payment, Clearing and Settlement Supervision Act means 
Title VIII of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection 
Act (124 Stat. 1802, 1803, 1807, 1809, 1811, 1814, 1816, 1818, 1820, 
1821; 12 U.S.C. 5461 et seq.);
    (4) The term proposed rule change has the meaning set forth in 
Section 19(b)(1) of the Act (15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1));
    (5) The term security-based swap submission means a submission 
required to be made by a clearing agency pursuant to section 3C(b)(2) 
of the Act (15 U.S.C. 78c-3(b)(2)) for each security-based swap, or any 
group, category, type or class of security-based swaps, that such 
clearing agency plans to accept for clearing;
    (6) The term stated policy, practice, or interpretation means:
    (i) Any material aspect of the operation of the facilities of the 
self-regulatory organization; or
    (ii) Any statement made generally available to the membership of, 
to all participants in, or to persons having or seeking access 
(including, in the case of national securities exchanges or registered 
securities associations, through a member) to facilities of, the self-
regulatory organization (``specified persons''), or to a group or 
category of specified persons, that establishes or changes any 
standard, limit, or guideline with respect to:
    (A) The rights, obligations, or privileges of specified persons or, 
in the case of national securities exchanges or registered securities 
associations, persons associated with specified persons; or
    (B) The meaning, administration, or enforcement of an existing 
rule.
* * * * *
    (l) The self-regulatory organization shall post each proposed rule 
change, and any amendments thereto, on its Web site within two business 
days after the filing of the proposed rule change, and any amendments 
thereto, with the Commission. If a self-regulatory organization does 
not post a proposed rule change on its Web site on the same day that it 
filed the proposal with the Commission, then the self-regulatory 
organization shall inform the Commission of the date on which it posted 
such proposal on its Web site. Such proposed rule change and amendments 
shall be maintained on the self-regulatory organization's Web site 
until:
* * * * *
    (n)(1) A designated clearing agency shall provide an advance notice 
to the Commission of any proposed change to its rules, procedures, or 
operations that could materially affect the nature or level of risks 
presented by such designated clearing agency. Such advance notice shall 
be submitted to the Commission electronically on Form 19b-4 (referenced 
in 17 CFR 249.819). The Commission shall, upon the filing of any 
advance notice, provide for prompt publication thereof.
    (2)(i) For purposes of this paragraph (n), the phrase materially 
affect the nature or level of risks presented, when used to qualify 
determinations on a change to rules, procedures, or operations at the 
designated clearing agency, means matters as to which there is a 
reasonable possibility that the change could affect the performance of 
essential clearing and settlement functions or the overall nature or 
level of risk presented by the designated clearing agency.
    (ii) Changes to rules, procedures or operations that could 
materially affect the nature or level or risks presented by a 
designated clearing agency utility may include, but are not limited to, 
changes that materially affect participant and product eligibility, 
risk management, daily or intraday settlement procedures, default 
procedures, system safeguards, governance or financial resources of the 
designated clearing agency.
    (iii) Changes to rules, procedures or operations that may not 
materially affect the nature or level or risks presented by a 
designated clearing agency include, but are not limited to:
    (A) Changes to an existing procedure, control, or service that do 
not modify the rights or obligations of the designated financial market 
utility or persons using its payment, clearing, or settlement services 
and that do not adversely affect the safeguarding of securities, 
collateral, or funds in the custody or control of the designated 
financial market utility or for which it is responsible; or
    (B) Changes concerned solely with the administration of the 
designated financial market utility or related to the routine, daily 
administration, direction, and control of employees;
    (3) The designated clearing agency shall post the advance notice, 
and any amendments thereto, on its Web site within two business days 
after the filing of the advance notice, and any amendments, thereto the 
Commission. Such advance notice and amendments shall be maintained on 
the designated clearing agency's Web site until the earlier of:
    (i) The date the designated clearing agency withdraws the advance 
notice or is notified that the advance notice is not properly filed; or
    (ii) The date the designated clearing agency posts a notice of 
effectiveness as required by paragraph (n)(4)(ii) of this section.
    (4)(i) The designated clearing agency shall post a notice on its 
Web site within two business days of the date that any change to its 
rules, procedures, or operations referred to in an advance notice has 
been permitted to take effect as such date is determined in accordance 
with Section 806(e) of the Payment, Clearing and Settlement Supervision 
Act (12 U.S.C. 5465)
    (ii) The designated clearing agency shall post a notice on its Web 
site within two business days of the effectiveness of any change to its 
rules, procedures, or operations referred to in an advance notice.
    (5) A designated clearing agency shall provide copies of all 
materials submitted to the Commission relating to an advance notice 
with the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System 
contemporaneously with such submission to the Commission.
    (o)(1) A clearing agency shall submit to the Commission a security-
based swap submission and provide notice to its members of such 
security-based swap submission.
    (2) Every clearing agency that is registered with the Commission 
that plans to accept a security-based swap, or any group, category, 
type or class of security-based swaps for clearing shall submit to the 
Commission electronically on Form 19b-4 (referenced in CFR 249.819) the 
information required to be submitted for a security-based swap 
submission, as provided in Sec.  240.19b-4 of this chapter and Form 
19b-4. Any information submitted to the Commission electronically on 
Form 19b-4 that is not complete or otherwise in compliance with Sec.  
240.19b-4 of this chapter and Form 19b-4, shall not be

[[Page 82522]]

considered a security-based swap submission and the Commission shall so 
inform the clearing agency within twenty-one business days of the 
submission on Form 19b-4.
    (3) A security-based swap submission submitted by a clearing agency 
to the Commission shall include a statement that includes, but is not 
limited to:
    (i) How the security-based swap submission is consistent with 
Section 17A of the Act (15 U.S.C. 78q-1); and
    (ii) Information that will assist the Commission in the 
quantitative and qualitative assessment of the factors specified in 
Section 3C of the Act (15 U.S.C. 78c-3), including, but not limited to:
    (A) The existence of significant outstanding notional exposures, 
trading liquidity and adequate pricing data;
    (B) The availability of a rule framework, capacity, operational 
expertise and resources, and credit support infrastructure to clear the 
contract on terms that are consistent with the material terms and 
trading conventions on which the contract is then traded;
    (C) The effect on the mitigation of systemic risk, taking into 
account the size of the market for such contract and the resources of 
the clearing agency available to clear the contract;
    (D) The effect on competition, including appropriate fees and 
charges applied to clearing;
    (E) The existence of reasonable legal certainty in the event of the 
insolvency of the relevant clearing agency or one or more of its 
clearing members with regard to the treatment of customer and security-
based swap counterparty positions, funds, and property;
    (F) How the rules of the clearing agency prescribe that all 
security-based swaps submitted to the clearing agency with the same 
terms and conditions are economically equivalent within the clearing 
agency and may be offset with each other within the clearing agency, as 
applicable to the security-based swaps described in the security-based 
swap submission.
    (G) How the rules of the clearing agency provide for non-
discriminatory clearing of a security-based swap executed bilaterally 
or on or through the rules of an unaffiliated national securities 
exchange or security-based swap execution facility, as applicable to 
the security-based swaps described in the security-based swap 
submission.
    (4) A clearing agency shall submit security-based swaps to the 
Commission for review by group, category, type or class of security-
based swaps, to the extent reasonable and practicable to do so.
    (5) A clearing agency shall post each security-based swap 
submission, and any amendments thereto, on its Web site within two 
business days after the submission of the security-based swap 
submission, and any amendments thereto, with the Commission. Such 
security-based swap submission and amendments shall be maintained on 
the clearing agency's Web site until the Commission makes a 
determination regarding the security-based swap submission or the 
clearing agency withdraws the security-based swap submission, or is 
notified that the security-based swap submission is not properly filed.
    (6) Upon receipt of a security-based swap submission pursuant to 
this section, the Commission shall review the security-based swap 
submission and determine whether the security-based swap, or group, 
category, type or class of security-based swaps, described in the 
submission is required to be cleared.
    (i) When making a determination, the Commission will take into 
account the factors addressed in the security-based swap submission and 
any additional factors the Commission determines to be appropriate. The 
clearing agency shall provide any additional information requested by 
the Commission as necessary to assess any of the factors it determines 
to be appropriate in order to make the determination of whether the 
clearing requirement applies.
    (ii) In making a determination that the clearing requirement shall 
apply, the Commission may include such terms and conditions to the 
requirement as the Commission determines to be appropriate in the 
public interest.
    (7) Notices of orders issued pursuant to Section 3C of the Act (15 
U.S.C. 78c-3), regarding security-based swap submissions will be given 
by prompt publication thereof, together with a statement of written 
reasons therefor.

PART 249--FORMS, SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

    4. The general authority citation for part 249 is revised to read 
as follows:

    Authority: 15 U.S.C. 78a et seq. and 7201 et seq.; 12 U.S.C. 
5461 et seq; and 18 U.S.C. 1350, unless otherwise noted.
* * * * *
    Section 249.819 is also issued under 12 U.S.C. 5465(e).
    5. Revise Sec.  249.819 to read as follows:


Sec.  249.819  Form 19b-4, for electronic filings with respect to 
proposed rule changes, advance notices and security-based swap 
submissions by all self-regulatory organizations.

    This form shall be used by all self-regulatory organizations, as 
defined in Section 3(a)(26) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15 
U.S.C. 78c(a)(26)), to file electronically proposed rule changes with 
the Commission pursuant to Section 19(b) of the Act and Sec.  240.19b-4 
of this chapter, advance notices with the Commission pursuant to 
Section 806(e) of the Payment, Clearing and Settlement Supervision Act 
(12 U.S.C. 5465) and Sec.  240.19b-4 of this chapter and security-based 
swap submissions with the Commission pursuant to Section 3C(b)(2) of 
the Act (15 U.S.C. 78c-3(b)(2)) and Sec.  240.19b-4 of this chapter.
    6. Form 19b-4 (referenced in Sec.  249.819) is revised to read as 
follows:

    Note: The text of Form 19b-4 does not and the amendments will 
not appear in the Code of Federal Regulations.

BILLING CODE P

[[Page 82523]]

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[[Page 82524]]


BILLING CODE C
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP30DE10.025

General Instructions for Form 19b-4

A. Use of the Form

    All self-regulatory organization proposed rule changes, except 
filings with respect to proposed rule changes by self-regulatory 
organizations submitted pursuant to Section 19(b)(7) of the Securities 
Exchange Act of 1934 (``Act''), security-based swap submissions, and 
advance notices shall be filed in an electronic format through the 
Electronic Form 19b-4 Filing System (``EFFS''), a secure Web site 
operated by the Commission. This form shall be used for filings of 
proposed rule changes by all self-regulatory organizations pursuant to 
Section 19(b) of the Act, except filings with respect to proposed rule 
changes by self-regulatory organizations submitted pursuant to Section 
19(b)(7) of the Act.\171\ National securities exchanges, registered 
securities associations, registered clearing agencies, and the 
Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board are self-regulatory organizations 
for purposes of

[[Page 82525]]

this form. This form shall be used for all security-based swap 
submissions and advance notices filed by registered clearing agencies. 
A proposed change that is required to be filed with the Commission 
under more than one of these three processes (a proposed rule change, 
security-based swap submission, or advance notice) shall be submitted 
on the same Form 19b-4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \171\ Because Section 19(b)(7)(C) of the Act states that filings 
abrogated pursuant to this Section should be re-filed pursuant to 
paragraph (b)(1) of Section 19 of the Act, SROs are required to file 
electronically such proposed rule changes in accordance with this 
form.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

B. Need for Careful Preparation of the Completed Form, Including 
Exhibits

    This form, including the exhibits, is intended to elicit 
information necessary for the public to provide meaningful comment on 
the proposed rule change, security-based swap submission, or advance 
notice and for the Commission to determine whether the proposed rule 
change, security-based swap submission, or advance notice is consistent 
with the requirements of the Act and the rules and regulations 
thereunder or the Payment, Clearing and Settlement Supervision Act and 
the rules and regulations thereunder applicable to the self-regulatory 
organization. The self-regulatory organization must provide all the 
information called for by the form, including the exhibits, and must 
present the information in a clear and comprehensible manner.
    The proposed rule change, security-based swap submission, or 
advance notice shall be considered filed on the date on which the 
Commission receives the proposed rule change, security-based swap 
submission, or advance notice if the filing complies with all 
requirements of this form. Any filing that does not comply with the 
requirements of this form may be returned to the self-regulatory 
organization. Any filing so returned shall for all purposes be deemed 
not to have been filed with the Commission. See also Rule 0-3 under the 
Act (17 CFR 240.0-3).

C. Documents Comprising the Completed Form

    The completed form filed with the Commission shall consist of the 
Form 19b-4 Page 1, numbers and captions for all items, responses to all 
items, and exhibits required in Item 11. In responding to an item, the 
completed form may omit the text of the item as contained herein if the 
response is prepared to indicate to the reader the coverage of the item 
without the reader having to refer to the text of the item or its 
instructions. Each filing shall be marked on the Form 19b-4 with the 
initials of the self-regulatory organization, the four-digit year, and 
the number of the filing for the year (e.g., SRO-YYYY-XX). If the SRO 
is filing Exhibits 2 or 3 via paper, the exhibits must be filed within 
5 calendar days of the electronic submission of all other required 
documents.

D. Amendments

    If information on this form is or becomes inaccurate before the 
Commission takes action on the proposed rule change or the security-
based swap submission, or prior to the expiration of the statutory 
review period with respect to advance notices (as determined in 
accordance with 806(e) of the Payment, Clearing and Settlement 
Supervision Act), the self-regulatory organization shall correct any 
such inaccuracy. Amendments shall be filed as specified in Instruction 
F.
    Amendments to a filing shall include the Form 19b-4 Page 1 marked 
to number consecutively the amendments, numbers and captions for each 
amended item, amended response to the item, and required exhibits. The 
amended response to Item 3 shall explain the purpose of the amendment 
and, if the amendment changes the purpose of or basis for the proposed 
rule change, security-based swap submission, or advance notice, the 
amended response shall also provide a revised purpose and basis 
statement. Exhibit 1 or Exhibit 1A, as applicable, shall be re-filed if 
there is a material change from the immediately preceding filing in the 
language of the proposed rule change or in the information provided 
relating to the proposed rule change, security-based swap submission, 
or advance notice.
    If the amendment alters the text of an existing rule, the amendment 
shall include the text of the existing rule, marked in the manner 
described in Item 1(a) using brackets to indicate words to be deleted 
from the existing rule and underscoring to indicate words to be added. 
The purpose of this marking requirement is to maintain a current copy 
of how the text of the existing rule is being changed.
    If the amendment alters the text of the proposed rule change as it 
appeared in the immediately preceding filing (even if the proposed rule 
change does not alter the text of an existing rule), the amendment 
shall include, as Exhibit 4, the entire text of the rule as altered. 
This full text shall be marked, in any convenient manner, to indicate 
additions to and deletions from the immediately preceding filing. The 
purpose of Exhibit 4 is to permit the staff to identify immediately the 
changes made from the text of the rule with which it has been working.
    If the self-regulatory organization is amending only part of the 
text of a lengthy proposed rule change, it may, with the Commission's 
permission, file only those portions of the text of the proposed rule 
change in which changes are being made if the filing (i.e., partial 
amendment) is clearly understandable on its face. Such partial 
amendment shall be clearly identified and marked to show deletions and 
additions.
    If, after the Form 19b-4 is filed but before the Commission takes 
final action on it, the self-regulatory organization receives or 
prepares any correspondence or other communications reduced to writing 
(including comment letters) to and from such self-regulatory 
organization concerning the proposed rule change, security-based swap 
submission, or advance notice, the communications shall be filed as 
Exhibit 2. If information in the communication makes the filing 
inaccurate, the filing shall be amended to correct the inaccuracy. If 
such communications cannot be filed electronically in accordance with 
Instruction F, the communications shall be filed in accordance with 
Instruction G.

E. Completion of Action by the Self-Regulatory Organization on the 
Proposed Rule Change

    The Commission will not approve a proposed rule change or make a 
determination regarding a security-based swap submission or raise no 
objection to an advance notice before the self-regulatory organization 
has completed all action required to be taken under its constitution, 
articles of incorporation, bylaws, rules, or instruments corresponding 
thereto (excluding action specified in any such instrument with respect 
to (i) compliance with the procedures of the Act or (ii) the formal 
filing of amendments pursuant to State law).

F. Signature and Filing of the Completed Form

    All proposed rule changes, security-based swap submissions, advance 
notices, amendments, extensions, and withdrawals of proposed rule 
changes, security-based swap submissions, and advance notices shall be 
filed through the EFFS. In order to file Form 19b-4 through EFFS, self-
regulatory organizations must request access to the SEC's External 
Application Server by completing a request for an external account user 
ID and password. Initial requests will be received by contacting the 
Trading and Markets Administrator located on our Web site (http://www.sec.gov). An e-mail will be sent to the requestor that will provide 
a link to

[[Page 82526]]

a secure Web site where basic profile information will be requested.
    A duly authorized officer of the self-regulatory organization shall 
electronically sign the completed Form 19b-4 as indicated on Page 1 of 
the Form. In addition, a duly authorized officer of the self-regulatory 
organization shall manually sign one copy of the completed Form 19b-4, 
and the manually signed signature page shall be maintained pursuant to 
Section 17 of the Act. A registered clearing agency for which the 
Commission is not the appropriate regulatory agency also shall file 
with its appropriate regulatory agency three copies of the form, one of 
which shall be manually signed, including exhibits. A clearing agency 
that also is a designated clearing agency shall file with the Board of 
Governors of the Federal Reserve System three copies of the form, one 
of which shall be manually signed, including exhibits. The Municipal 
Securities Rulemaking Board also shall file copies of the form, 
including exhibits, with the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve 
System, the Comptroller of the Currency, and the Federal Deposit 
Insurance Corporation.

G. Procedures for Submission of Paper Documents for Exhibits 2 and 3

    To the extent that Exhibits 2 and 3 cannot be filed electronically 
in accordance with Instruction F, four copies of Exhibits 2 and 3 shall 
be filed with the Division of Trading and Markets, Securities and 
Exchange Commission, 100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC 20549. Page 1 of 
the electronic Form 19b-4 shall accompany paper submissions of Exhibits 
2 and 3. If the SRO is filing Exhibits 2 and 3 via paper, they must be 
filed within five calendar days of the electronic filing of all other 
required documents.

H. Withdrawals of Proposed Rule Changes, Security-Based Swap 
Submissions or Advance Notices

    If a self-regulatory organization determines to withdraw a proposed 
rule change, security-based swap submission, or advance notice, it must 
complete Page 1 of the Form 19b-4 and indicate by selecting the 
appropriate check box to withdraw the filing.

I. Procedures for Granting an Extension of Time for Commission Final 
Action

    After the Commission publishes notice of a proposed rule change or 
security-based swap submission, if a self-regulatory organization 
wishes to grant the Commission an extension of the time to take final 
action as specified in Section 19(b)(2) or Section 3C, the self-
regulatory organization shall indicate on the Form 19b-4 Page 1 the 
granting of said extension as well as the date the extension expires.

Information To Be Included in the Completed Form (``Form 19b-4 
Information'')

1. Text of the Proposed Rule Change

    (a) Include the text of the proposed rule change, security-based 
swap submission, or advance notice. Text of the proposed rule change 
also should be included either in Exhibit 5 or Exhibit 1 (or Exhibit 1A 
in the filing of a clearing agency). Changes in, additions to, or 
deletions from, any existing rule shall be set forth with brackets used 
to indicate words to be deleted and underscoring used to indicate words 
to be added.
    If any form, report, or questionnaire is
    (i) Proposed to be used in connection with the implementation or 
operation of the proposed rule change, security-based swap submission, 
or advance notice, or
    (ii) Prescribed or referred to in the proposed rule change, 
security-based swap submission, or advance notice;


then the form, report, or questionnaire must be attached to and shall 
be considered as part of the proposed rule change, security-based swap 
submission, or advance notice. If completion of the form, report, or 
questionnaire is voluntary or is required pursuant to an existing rule 
of the self-regulatory organization, then the form, report, or 
questionnaire, together with a statement identifying any existing rule 
that requires completion of the form, report, or questionnaire, shall 
be attached as Exhibit 3. If the form, report, or questionnaire cannot 
be filed electronically in accordance with Instruction F, the documents 
shall be filed in accordance with Instruction G.
    (b) If the self-regulatory organization reasonably expects that the 
proposed rule change, security-based swap submission, or advance notice 
will have any direct effect, or significant indirect effect, on the 
application of any other rule of the self-regulatory organization, set 
forth the designation or title of any such rule and describe the 
anticipated effect of the proposed rule change, security-based swap 
submission, or advance notice on the application of such other rule.
    (c) Include the file numbers for prior filings with respect to any 
existing rule specified in response to Item 1(b).

2. Procedures of the Self-Regulatory Organization

    Describe action on the proposed rule change, security-based swap 
submission, or advance notice taken by the members or board of 
directors or other governing body of the self-regulatory organization. 
See Instruction E.

3. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and 
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change

    Provide a statement of the purpose of the proposed rule change and 
its basis under the Act and the rules and regulations thereunder 
applicable to the self-regulatory organization. With respect to 
proposed rule changes filed pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the Act, 
except for proposed rule changes that have been abrogated pursuant to 
Section 19(b)(7)(C) of the Act, the statement should be sufficiently 
detailed and specific to support a finding that the proposed rule 
change is consistent with the requirements of the Act and the rules and 
regulations thereunder applicable to the self-regulatory organization. 
With respect to proposed rule changes filed pursuant to Section 
19(b)(1) of the Act that have been abrogated pursuant to Section 
19(b)(7)(C) of the Act, the statement should be sufficiently detailed 
and specific to support a finding under Section 19(b)(7)(D) of the Act 
that the proposed rule change does not unduly burden competition or 
efficiency, does not conflict with the securities laws, and is not 
inconsistent with the public interest or the protection of investors. 
At a minimum, the statement should:
    (a) Describe the reasons for adopting the proposed rule change, any 
problems the proposed rule change is intended to address, the manner in 
which the proposed rule change will operate to resolve those problems, 
the manner in which the proposed rule change will affect various 
persons (e.g., brokers, dealers, issuers, and investors), and any 
significant problems known to the self-regulatory organization that 
persons affected are likely to have in complying with the proposed rule 
change; and
    (b) Explain why the proposed rule change is consistent with the 
requirements of the Act and the rules and regulations thereunder 
applicable to the self-regulatory organization. A mere assertion that 
the proposed rule change is consistent with those requirements is not 
sufficient. With respect to a proposed rule change filed pursuant to 
Section 19(b)(1) of the Act that has been abrogated pursuant to Section

[[Page 82527]]

19(b)(7)(C) of the Act, explain why the proposed rule change does not 
unduly burden competition or efficiency, does not conflict with the 
securities laws, and is not inconsistent with the public interest and 
the protection of investors, in accordance with Section 19(b)(7)(D) of 
the Act. A mere assertion that the proposed rule change satisfies these 
requirements is not sufficient. In the case of a registered clearing 
agency, also explain how the proposed rule change will be implemented 
consistently with the safeguarding of securities and funds in its 
custody or control or for which it is responsible. Certain limitations 
that the Act imposes on self-regulatory organizations are summarized in 
the notes that follow.
    Failure to describe and justify the proposed rule change in the 
manner described above may result in the Commission not having 
sufficient information to make an affirmative finding that the proposed 
rule change is consistent with the Act and the rules and regulations 
issued thereunder that are applicable to the self-regulatory 
organization.

    Note 1. National Securities Exchanges and Registered Securities 
Associations. Under Sections 6 and 15A of the Act, rules of a 
national securities exchange or registered securities association 
may not permit unfair discrimination between customers, issuers, 
brokers, or dealers, and may not regulate, by virtue of any 
authority conferred by the Act, matters not related to the purposes 
of the Act or the administration of the self-regulatory 
organization. Rules of a registered securities association may not 
fix minimum profits or impose any schedule of or fix rates of 
commissions, allowances, discounts, or other fees to be charged by 
its members.
    Under Section 11A(c)(5) of the Act, a national securities 
exchange or registered securities association may not limit or 
condition the participation of any member in any registered clearing 
agency.


    Note 2. Registered Clearing Agencies. Under Section 17A of the 
Act, rules of a registered clearing agency may not permit unfair 
discrimination in the admission of participants or among 
participants in the use of the clearing agency, may not regulate, by 
virtue of any authority conferred by the Act, matters not related to 
the purposes of Section 17A of the Act or the administration of the 
clearing agency, and may not impose any schedule of prices, or fix 
rates or other fees, for services rendered by its participants.


    Note 3. Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board. Under Section 15B 
of the Act, rules of the Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board may 
not permit unfair discrimination between customers, issuers, 
municipal securities brokers, or municipal securities dealers, may 
not fix minimum profits, or impose any schedule or fix rates of 
commissions, allowances, discounts, or other fees to be charged by 
municipal securities brokers or municipal securities dealers, and 
may not regulate, by virtue of any authority conferred by the Act, 
matters not related to the purposes of the Act with respect to 
municipal securities or the administration of the Board.

4. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Burden on Competition

    State whether the proposed rule change will have an impact on 
competition and, if so, (i) state whether the proposed rule change will 
impose any burden on competition or whether it will relieve any burden 
on, or otherwise promote, competition and (ii) specify the particular 
categories of persons and kinds of businesses on which any burden will 
be imposed and the ways in which the proposed rule change will affect 
them. If the proposed rule change amends an existing rule, state 
whether that existing rule, as amended by the proposed rule change, 
will impose any burden on competition. If any impact on competition is 
not believed to be a significant burden on competition, explain why. 
Explain why any burden on competition is necessary or appropriate in 
furtherance of the purposes of the Act. In providing those 
explanations, set forth and respond in detail to written comments as to 
any significant impact or burden on competition perceived by any person 
who has made comments on the proposed rule change to the self-
regulatory organization. A mere assertion that the proposed rule change 
satisfies these requirements is not sufficient. The statement 
concerning burdens on competition should be sufficiently detailed and 
specific to support a Commission finding that the proposed rule change 
does not impose any unnecessary or inappropriate burden on competition. 
Failure to describe and justify the proposed rule change in the manner 
described above may result in the Commission not having sufficient 
information to make an affirmative finding that the proposed rule 
change is consistent with the Act and the rules and regulations issued 
thereunder that are applicable to the self-regulatory organization.

5. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Comments on the Proposed 
Rule Change Received From Members, Participants, or Others

    If written comments were received (whether or not comments were 
solicited) from members of or participants in the self-regulatory 
organization or others, summarize the substance of all such comments 
received and respond in detail to any significant issues that those 
comments raised about the proposed rule change. If an issue is 
summarized and responded to in detail under Item 3 or Item 4, that 
response need not be duplicated if appropriate cross-reference is made 
to the place where the response can be found. If comments were not or 
are not to be solicited, so state.

6. Extension of Time Period for Commission Action

    State whether the self-regulatory organization consents to an 
extension of the time period specified in Section 19(b)(2) or Section 
19(b)(7)(D) of the Act and the duration of the extension, if any, to 
which the self-regulatory organization consents.

7. Basis for Summary Effectiveness Pursuant to Section 19(b)(3) or for 
Accelerated Effectiveness Pursuant to Section 19(b)(2) or Section 
19(b)(7)(D)

    (a) If the proposed rule change is to take, or to be put into, 
effect, pursuant to Section 19(b)(3), state whether the filing is made 
pursuant to paragraph (A) or (B) thereof.
    (b) In the case of paragraph (A) of Section 19(b)(3), designate 
that the proposed rule change:
    (i) Is a stated policy, practice, or interpretation with respect to 
the meaning, administration, or enforcement of an existing rule,
    (ii) Establishes or changes a due, fee, or other charge,
    (iii) Is concerned solely with the administration of the self-
regulatory organization,
    (iv) Effects a change in an existing service of a registered 
clearing agency that (A) does not adversely affect the safeguarding of 
securities or funds in the custody or control of the clearing agency or 
for which it is responsible and (B) does not significantly affect the 
respective rights or obligations of the clearing agency or persons 
using the service, and set forth the basis on which such designation is 
made,
    (v) Effects a change in an existing order-entry or trading system 
of a self-regulatory organization that (A) does not significantly 
affect the protection of investors or the public interest; (B) does not 
impose any significant burden on competition; and (C) does not have the 
effect of limiting the access to or availability of the system, or
    (vi) Effects a change that (A) does not significantly affect the 
protection of investors or the public interest; (B) does not impose any 
significant burden on competition; and (C) by its terms, does not 
become operative for 30 days after the date of the filing, or such 
shorter time as the Commission may designate if consistent with the 
protection of

[[Page 82528]]

investors and the public interest; provided that the self-regulatory 
organization has given the Commission written notice of its intent to 
file the proposed rule change, along with a brief description and text 
of the proposed rule change, at least five business days prior to the 
date of filing of the proposed rule change, or such shorter time as 
designated by the Commission. If it is requested that the proposed rule 
change become operative in less than 30 days, provide a statement 
explaining why the Commission should shorten this time period.
    (c) In the case of paragraph (B) of Section 19(b)(3), set forth the 
basis upon which the Commission should, in the view of the self-
regulatory organization, determine that the protection of investors, 
the maintenance of fair and orderly markets, or the safeguarding of 
securities and funds requires that the proposed rule change should be 
put into effect summarily by the Commission.

    Note: The Commission has the power under Section 19(b)(3)(C) of 
the Act to summarily temporarily suspend within sixty days of its 
filing any proposed rule change which has taken effect upon filing 
pursuant to Section 19(b)(3)(A) of the Act or was put into effect 
summarily by the Commission pursuant to Section 19(b)(3)(B) of the 
Act. In exercising its summary power under Section 19(b)(3)(B), the 
Commission is required to make one of the findings described above 
but may not have a full opportunity to make a determination that the 
proposed rule change otherwise is consistent with the requirements 
of the Act and the rules and regulations thereunder. The Commission 
will generally exercise its summary power under Section 19(b)(3)(B) 
on condition that the proposed rule change to be declared effective 
summarily shall also be subject to the procedures of Section 
19(b)(2) of the Act. Accordingly, in most cases, a summary order 
under Section 19(b)(3)(B) shall be effective only until such time as 
the Commission shall enter an order, pursuant to Section 19(b)(2)(A) 
of the Act, to approve such proposed rule change or, depending on 
the circumstances, until such time as the Commission shall institute 
proceedings to determine whether to disapprove such proposed rule 
change or, alternatively, such time as the Commission shall, at the 
conclusion of such proceedings, enter an order, pursuant to Section 
19(b)(2)(B), approving or disapproving such proposed rule change.

    (d) If accelerated effectiveness pursuant to Section 19(b)(2) or 
Section 19(b)(7)(D) of the Act is requested, provide a statement 
explaining why there is good cause for the Commission to accelerate 
effectiveness.

8. Proposed Rule Change Based on Rules of Another Self-Regulatory 
Organization or of the Commission

    State whether the proposed rule change is based on a rule either of 
another self-regulatory organization or of the Commission, and, if so, 
identify the rule and explain any differences between the proposed rule 
change and that rule, as the filing self-regulatory organization 
understands it. In explaining any such differences, give particular 
attention to differences between the conduct required to comply with 
the proposed rule change and that required to comply with the other 
rule.

9. Security-Based Swap Submissions Filed Pursuant to Section 3C of the 
Act

    (a) A clearing agency shall submit to the Commission on this Form 
19b-4, a security-based swap submission for any security-based swap, or 
any group, category, type or class of security-based swaps that the 
clearing agency plans to accept for clearing.
    (b) The clearing agency shall include in the security-based swaps 
submission a statement that includes, but is not limited to:
    (i) How the security-based swap submission is consistent with 
Section 17A of the Act (15 U.S.C. 78q-1);
    (ii) Information that will assist the Commission in the 
quantitative and qualitative assessment of the factors specified in 
Section 3C of the Act (15 U.S.C. 78c-3), including, but not limited to:
    (A) The existence of significant outstanding notional exposures, 
trading liquidity and adequate pricing data;
    (B) The availability of a rule framework, capacity, operational 
expertise and resources, and credit support infrastructure to clear the 
contract on terms that are consistent with the material terms and 
trading conventions on which the contract is then traded;
    (C) The effect on the mitigation of systemic risk, taking into 
account the size of the market for such contract and the resources of 
the clearing agency available to clear the contract;
    (D) The effect on competition, including appropriate fees and 
charges applied to clearing;
    (E) The existence of reasonable legal certainty in the event of the 
insolvency of the relevant clearing agency or one or more of its 
clearing members with regard to the treatment of customer and security-
based swap counterparty positions, funds, and property;
    (F) How the rules of the clearing agency prescribe that all 
security-based swaps submitted to the clearing agency with the same 
terms and conditions are economically equivalent within the clearing 
agency and may be offset with each other within the clearing agency, as 
applicable to the security-based swaps described in the security-based 
swap submission.
    (G) How the rules of the clearing agency provide for non-
discriminatory clearing of a security-based swap executed bilaterally 
or on or through the rules of an unaffiliated national securities 
exchange or security-based swap execution facility, as applicable to 
the security-based swaps described in the security-based swap 
submission.

    Note: In connection with the factor specified in Item 
9(b)(ii)(A) above, the clearing agency could address pricing 
sources, models and procedures demonstrating an ability to obtain 
price data to measure credit exposures in a timely and accurate 
manner, as well as measures of historical market liquidity and 
trading activity, and expected market liquidity and trading activity 
if the security-based swap is required to be cleared (including 
information on the sources of such measures). With respect to the 
discussion of the factor specified in Item 9(b)(ii)(B) above, the 
statement describing the availability of a rule framework could 
include a discussion of the rules, policies or procedures applicable 
to the clearing of the relevant security-based swap. Additionally, 
the discussion of credit support infrastructure specified in Item 
9(b)(ii)(B) above could include the methods to address and 
communicate requests for, and posting of, collateral. With respect 
to the factor specified in Item 9(b)(ii)(C) above, the discussion of 
systemic risk could include a statement on the clearing agency's 
risk management procedures, including among other things the 
measurement and monitoring of credit exposures, initial and 
variation margin methodology, methodologies for stress testing and 
back testing, settlement procedures and default management 
procedures. With respect to the factor specified in Item 9(b)(ii)(D) 
above, the discussion of fees and charges could address any volume 
incentive programs that may apply or impact the fees and charges. 
With respect to the factor specified in Item 9(b)(ii)(E) above, the 
discussion could address segregation of accounts and all other 
customer protection measures under insolvency.
    In describing the security-based swap, or any group, category, 
type or class of security-based swaps, that a clearing agency plans 
to accept for clearing, the clearing agency could include the 
relevant product specifications, including copies of any 
standardized legal documentation, generally accepted contract terms, 
standard practices for managing and communicating any life cycle 
events associated with the security-based swap and related 
adjustments, and the manner in which the information contained in 
the confirmation of the security-based swap trade is transmitted. 
The clearing agency also could discuss its financial and operational 
capacity to provide clearing services to all

[[Page 82529]]

customers subject to the clearing requirements as applicable to the 
particular security-based swap. Finally, the clearing agency could 
include an analysis of the effect of a clearing requirement on the 
market for the group, category, type, or class of security-based 
swaps, both domestically and globally, including the potential 
effect on market liquidity, trading activity, use of security-based 
swaps by direct and indirect market participants and any potential 
market disruption or benefits. This analysis could include whether 
the members of the clearing agency are operationally and financially 
capable of absorbing clearing business (including indirect access 
market participants) that may result from a determination that the 
security-based swap (or group, category, type or class of security-
based swap) is required to be cleared.

    (c) A clearing agency shall submit security-based swaps to the 
Commission for review by group, category, type or class of security-
based swaps, to the extent reasonable and practicable to do so.
    (d) A clearing agency shall file as an amendment to this Form 19b-4 
any additional information necessary to assess any of the factors the 
Commission determines to be appropriate in order to make a 
determination regarding the clearing requirement.
    (e) A security-based swap submission pursuant to Section 3C that 
also is required to be filed as a proposed rule change under Section 
19(b) or an advance notice under Section 806(e) of the Payment, 
Clearing and Settlement Supervision Act shall not take effect until 
determinations are obtained under each of the other applicable 
statutory provisions.

10. Advance Notices Filed Pursuant to Section 806(e) of the Payment, 
Clearing and Settlement Supervision Act

    (a) A designated clearing agency shall provide notice on this Form 
19b-4 sixty (60) days in advance of any proposed change to its rules, 
procedures, or operations that could, as defined in Rule 19b-4, 
materially affect the nature or level of risks presented by the 
designated clearing agency.
    (b) A designated clearing agency shall include in the notice a 
description of:
    (i) The nature of the change and expected effects on risks to the 
designated clearing agency, its participants, or the market; and
    (ii) How the designated financial market utility plans to manage 
any identified risks.
    (c) A designated clearing agency shall file as amendment to this 
Form 19b-4 any additional information that is required to be filed by 
the Commission as necessary to assess the effect the proposed change 
would have on the nature or level of risks associated with the 
designated clearing agency's payment, clearing, or settlement 
activities and the sufficiency of any proposed risk management 
techniques.
    (d) A designated clearing agency that implements a proposed change 
on an emergency basis must file notice with the Commission on Form 19b-
4 within 24 hours of implementing the change. In addition to the 
information required for advance notices, the notice of an emergency 
change shall include a description of the nature of the emergency and 
the reason the change was necessary for the designated clearing agency 
to continue to operate in a safe and sound manner. Any change 
implemented by a designated clearing agency on an emergency basis also 
must comply with Section 19(b) and Section 3C of the Act to the extent 
those sections are applicable.
    (e) A proposed change filed pursuant to Section 806(e) that is also 
required to be filed as a proposed rule change under Section 19(b) or a 
security-based swap submission under Section 3C shall not take effect 
until determinations are obtained under each of the other applicable 
statutory provisions.

11. Exhibits

    List of exhibits to be filed, as specified in Instructions C and D:
    Exhibit 1. Completed Notice of Proposed Rule Change for publication 
in the Federal Register. Amendments to Exhibit 1 should be filed in 
accordance with Instructions D and F.
    Exhibit 1A. Completed Notice of Proposed Rule Change, Security-
Based Swap Submission, or Advance Notice for publication in the Federal 
Register. Amendments to Exhibit 1A should be filed in accordance with 
Instructions D and F.
    Exhibit 2 (a) Copies of notices issued by the self-regulatory 
organization soliciting comment on the proposed rule change, security-
based swap submission, or advance notice and copies of all written 
comments on the proposed rule change, security-based swap submission, 
or advance notice received by the self-regulatory organization (whether 
or not comments were solicited), presented in alphabetical order, 
together with an alphabetical listing of such comments. If such notices 
and comments cannot be filed electronically in accordance with 
Instruction F, the notices and comments shall be filed in accordance 
with Instruction G.
    (b) Copies of any transcript of comments on the proposed rule 
change, security-based swap submission, or advance notice made at any 
public meeting or, if a transcript is not available, a copy of the 
summary of comments on the proposed rule change made at such meeting. 
If such transcript of comments or summary of comments cannot be filed 
electronically in accordance with Instruction F, the transcript of 
comments or summary of comments shall be filed in accordance with 
Instruction G.
    (c) If after the proposed rule change, security-based swap 
submission, or advance notice is filed but before the Commission takes 
final action on it, the self-regulatory organization prepares or 
receives any correspondence or other communications reduced to writing 
(including comment letters) to and from such self-regulatory 
organization concerning the proposed rule change, the communications 
shall be filed in accordance with Instruction F. If such communications 
cannot be filed electronically in accordance with Instruction F, the 
communications shall be filed in accordance with Instruction G.
    Exhibit 3. Copies of any form, report, or questionnaire covered by 
Item 1(a). If such form, report, or questionnaire cannot be filed 
electronically in accordance with Instruction F, the form, report, or 
questionnaire shall be filed in accordance with Instruction G.
    Exhibit 4. For amendments to a filing, marked copies, if required 
by Instruction D, of the text of the proposed rule change as amended.
    Exhibit 5. The SRO may choose to attach as Exhibit 5 proposed 
changes to rule text in place of providing it in Item I and which may 
otherwise be more easily readable if provided separately from Form 19b-
4. Exhibit 5 shall be considered part of the proposed rule change.
SPECIFIC INSTRUCTIONS FOR EXHIBIT 1--NOTICE OF PROPOSED RULE CHANGE
EXHIBIT 1

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

[Release No. 34- ; File No. SR ]

[Date]

Self-Regulatory Organizations; [Name of Self-Regulatory Organization]; 
Notice of Filing [and Immediate Effectiveness] of a Proposed Rule 
Change Relating to [brief description of subject matter of proposed 
rule change]

General Instructions

A. Format Requirements

    The notice must comply with the guidelines for publication in the 
Federal Register, as well as any requirements for

[[Page 82530]]

electronic filing as published by the Commission (if applicable). For 
example, all references to the Federal securities laws must include the 
corresponding cite to the United States Code in a footnote. All 
references to SEC rules must include the corresponding cite to the Code 
of Federal Regulations in a footnote. All references to Securities 
Exchange Act Releases must include the release number, release date, 
Federal Register cite, Federal Register date, and corresponding file 
number (e.g., SR-[SRO]-XX-XX). A material failure to comply with these 
guidelines will result in the proposed rule change being deemed not 
properly filed. See also Rule 0-3 under the Act (17 CFR 240.0-3). Leave 
a 1-inch margin at the top, bottom, and right hand side, and a 1\1/2\ 
inch margin at the left hand side. Number all pages consecutively, 
consistent with Rule 0-3 under the Act (17 CFR 240.0-3). Double space 
all primary text and single space lists of items, quoted material when 
set apart from primary text, footnotes, and notes to tables.

B. Need for Careful Preparation of the Notice

    The self-regulatory organization must provide all information 
required in the notice and present it in a clear and comprehensible 
manner. It is the responsibility of the self-regulatory organization to 
prepare Items I, II and III of the notice. The Commission cautions 
self-regulatory organizations to pay particular attention to assure 
that the notice accurately reflects the information provided in the 
Form 19b-4 it accompanies. Any filing that does not comply with the 
requirements of Form 19b-4, including the requirements applicable to 
the notice, may be returned to the self-regulatory organization. Any 
document so returned shall for all purposes be deemed not to have been 
filed with the Commission. See Instruction B to Form 19b-4.
    Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act of 
1934, 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1), notice is hereby given that on (date),\*\ 
the (name of self-regulatory organization) filed with the Securities 
and Exchange Commission the proposed rule change as described in Items 
I, II and III below, which Items have been prepared by the self-
regulatory organization. The Commission is publishing this notice to 
solicit comments on the proposed rule change from interested persons.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \*\ To be completed by the Commission. This date will be the 
date on which the Commission receives the proposed rule change if 
the filing complies with all requirements of this form. See 
Instruction B to Form 19b-4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Information To Be Included in the Completed Notice

I. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Terms of Substance 
of the Proposed Rule Change

    (Supply a brief statement of the terms of substance of the proposed 
rule change. If the proposed rule change is relatively brief, a 
separate statement need not be prepared, and the text of the proposed 
rule change may be inserted in lieu of the statement of the terms of 
substance. If the proposed rule change amends an existing rule, 
indicate changes in the rule by brackets for words to be deleted and 
underlined for words to be added.)

II. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and 
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change

    In its filing with the Commission, the self-regulatory organization 
included statements concerning the purpose of and basis for the 
proposed rule change and discussed any comments it received on the 
proposed rule change. The text of these statements may be examined at 
the places specified in Item IV below. The self-regulatory organization 
has prepared summaries, set forth in sections A, B, and C below, of the 
most significant aspects of such statements. (Reproduce the headings, 
and summarize briefly the most significant aspects of the responses, to 
Items 3, 4, and 5 of Form 19b-4, redesignating them as A, B, and C, 
respectively.)

III. Date of Effectiveness of the Proposed Rule Change and Timing for 
Commission Action

    (If the proposed rule change is to be considered by the Commission 
pursuant to Section 19(b)(2) of the Act, the following paragraph should 
be used.)
    Within 45 days of the date of publication of this notice in the 
Federal Register or within such longer period up to 90 days (i) as the 
Commission may designate if it finds such longer period to be 
appropriate and publishes its reasons for so finding or (ii) as to 
which the self-regulatory organization consents, the Commission will:
    (A) By order approve or disapprove such proposed rule change, or
    (B) Institute proceedings to determine whether the proposed rule 
change should be disapproved.
    (If the proposed rule change is to take, or to be put into, effect 
pursuant to Section 19(b)(3)(A) of the Act and paragraph (f)(6) of Rule 
19b-4 thereunder, the following paragraph should be used.)
    Because the foregoing proposed rule change does not:
    (i) Significantly affect the protection of investors or the public 
interest;
    (ii) Impose any significant burden on competition; and
    (iii) Become operative for 30 days from the date on which it was 
filed, or such shorter time as the Commission may designate, it has 
become effective pursuant to Section 19(b)(3)(A) of the Act and Rule 
19b-4(f)(6) thereunder.
    At any time within 60 days of the filing of the proposed rule 
change, the Commission summarily may temporarily suspend such rule 
change if it appears to the Commission that such action is necessary or 
appropriate in the public interest, for the protection of investors, or 
otherwise in furtherance of the purposes of the Act.
    (If the proposed rule change is to take, or to be put into, effect 
pursuant to Section 19(b)(3)(A) of the Act and subparagraphs (1)-(5) of 
paragraph (f) of Rule 19b-4 thereunder, the following paragraph should 
be used.)
    The foregoing rule change has become effective pursuant to Section 
19(b)(3)(A) of the Act and paragraph (f) of Rule 19b-4 thereunder. At 
any time within 60 days of the filing of the proposed rule change, the 
Commission summarily may temporarily suspend such rule change if it 
appears to the Commission that such action is necessary or appropriate 
in the public interest, for the protection of investors, or otherwise 
in furtherance of the purposes of the Act.
    (If the proposed rule change is to be considered by the Commission 
pursuant to Section 19(b)(7)(D) of the Act, the following paragraph 
should be used.)
    Within 35 days of the date of publication of this notice in the 
Federal Register or within such longer period (i) as the Commission may 
designate up to 90 days of such date if it finds such longer period to 
be appropriate and publishes its reasons for so finding or (ii) as to 
which the self-regulatory organization consents, the Commission will:
    (A) By order approve such proposed rule change, or
    (B) After consultation with the Commodity Futures Trading 
Commission, institute proceedings to determine whether the proposed 
rule change should be disapproved.

IV. Solicitation of Comments

    Interested persons are invited to submit written data, views and 
arguments concerning the foregoing, including whether the proposed rule 
change is consistent with the Act.

[[Page 82531]]

Comments may be submitted by any of the following methods:

Electronic Comments

     Use the Commission's Internet comment form (http://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml); or
     Send an e-mail to [email protected]. Please include 
File Number XX on the subject line.

Paper Comments

     Send paper comments in triplicate to [Name of Secretary], 
Secretary, Securities and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street, NE., 
Washington, DC 20549.


All submissions should refer to File Number XX. This file number should 
be included on the subject line if e-mail is used. To help the 
Commission process and review your comments more efficiently, please 
use only one method. The Commission will post all comments on the 
Commission's Internet Web site (http://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml). 
Copies of the submission, all subsequent amendments, all written 
statements with respect to the proposed rule change that are filed with 
the Commission, and all written communications relating to the proposed 
rule change between the Commission and any person, other than those 
that may be withheld from the public in accordance with the provisions 
of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be available for Web site viewing and printing in 
the Commission's Public Reference Room, 100 F Street, NE., Washington, 
DC 20549 on official business days between the hours of 10 a.m. and 3 
p.m. Copies of the filing also will be available for inspection and 
copying at the principal office of the [self-regulatory organization]. 
All comments received will be posted without change; the Commission 
does not edit personal identifying information from submissions. You 
should submit only information that you wish to make available 
publicly. All submissions should refer to File Number XX and should be 
submitted on or before January 20, 2011.

    For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets, 
pursuant to delegated authority.\172\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \172\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).

Secretary.
SPECIFIC INSTRUCTIONS FOR EXHIBIT 1A--NOTICE OF PROPOSED RULE CHANGE, 
SECURITY-BASED SWAP SUBMISSION, OR ADVANCE NOTICE FILED BY CLEARING 
AGENCIES
EXHIBIT 1A

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

[Release No. 34- ; File No. SR ]

[Date]

Self-Regulatory Organizations; [Name of Clearing Agency]; Proposed Rule 
Change, Security-Based Swap Submission, or Advance Notice Relating to 
[brief description of subject matter of proposed rule change, security-
based swap submission, or advance notice]

General Instructions

A. Format Requirements

    The notice must comply with the guidelines for publication in the 
Federal Register, as well as any requirements for electronic filing as 
published by the Commission (if applicable). For example, all 
references to the Federal securities laws must include the 
corresponding cite to the United States Code in a footnote. All 
references to SEC rules must include the corresponding cite to the Code 
of Federal Regulations in a footnote. All references to Securities 
Exchange Act Releases must include the release number, release date, 
Federal Register cite, Federal Register date, and corresponding file 
number (e.g., SR-[SRO]-XX-XX). A material failure to comply with these 
guidelines will result in the proposed rule change being deemed not 
properly filed. See also Rule 0-3 under the Act (17 CFR 240.0-3). Leave 
a 1-inch margin at the top, bottom, and right hand side, and a 1\1/2\ 
inch margin at the left hand side. Number all pages consecutively, 
consistent with Rule 0-3 under the Act (17 CFR 240.0-3). Double space 
all primary text and single space lists of items, quoted material when 
set apart from primary text, footnotes, and notes to tables.

B. Need for Careful Preparation of the Notice

    The clearing agency must provide all information required in the 
notice and present it in a clear and comprehensible manner. It is the 
responsibility of the clearing agency to prepare Items I, II and III of 
the notice. The Commission cautions clearing agencies to pay particular 
attention to assure that the notice accurately reflects the information 
provided in the Form 19b-4 it accompanies. Any filing that does not 
comply with the requirements of Form 19b-4, including the requirements 
applicable to the notice, may be returned to the clearing agency. Any 
document so returned shall for all purposes be deemed not to have been 
filed with the Commission. See Instruction B to Form 19b-4.
    Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act of 
1934, 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1) and Rule 19b-4, 17 CFR 240.19b-4, notice is 
hereby given that on (date),\*\ the (name of clearing agency) filed 
with the Securities and Exchange Commission the proposed rule change, 
security-based swap submission, or advance notice as described in Items 
I, II and III below, which Items have been prepared by the clearing 
agency. The Commission is publishing this notice to solicit comments on 
the proposed rule change, security-based swap submission, or advance 
notice from interested persons.
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    \*\ To be completed by the Commission. This date will be the 
date on which the Commission receives the proposed rule change, 
security-based swap submission, or advance notice filing if the 
filing complies with all requirements of this form. See Instruction 
B to Form 19b-4.
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Information To Be Included in the Completed Notice

I. Clearing Agency's Statement of the Terms of Substance of the 
Proposed Rule Change, Security-Based Swap Submission, or Advance Notice

    (Supply a brief statement of the terms of substance of the proposed 
rule change, security-based swap submission or advance notice. If the 
proposed rule change is relatively brief, a separate statement need not 
be prepared, and the text of the proposed rule change may be inserted 
in lieu of the statement of the terms of substance. If the proposed 
rule change amends an existing rule, indicate changes in the rule by 
brackets for words to be deleted and underlined for words to be added.)

II. Clearing Agency's Statement of the Purpose of, and Statutory Basis 
for, the Proposed Rule Change, Security-Based Swap Submission, or 
Advance Notice

    In its filing with the Commission, the clearing agency included 
statements concerning the purpose of and basis for the proposed rule 
change, security-based swap submission and discussed any comments it 
received on the proposed rule change. The text of these statements may 
be examined at the places specified in Item IV below. The clearing 
agency has prepared summaries, set forth in sections A, B, and C below, 
of the most significant aspects of such statements. (Reproduce the 
headings, and summarize briefly the

[[Page 82532]]

most significant aspects of the responses, to Items 3, 4, and 5 of Form 
19b-4, redesignating them as A, B, and C, respectively.)

III. Date of Effectiveness of the Proposed Rule Change, Security-Based 
Swap Submission, and Advance Notice and Timing for Commission Action

    (If the proposed rule change is to be considered by the Commission 
pursuant to Section 19(b)(2) of the Act, the following paragraph should 
be used.)
    Within 45 days of the date of publication of this notice in the 
Federal Register or within such longer period up to 90 days (i) as the 
Commission may designate if it finds such longer period to be 
appropriate and publishes its reasons for so finding or (ii) as to 
which the self-regulatory organization consents, the Commission will:
    (A) By order approve or disapprove such proposed rule change, or
    (B) Institute proceedings to determine whether the proposed rule 
change should be disapproved.
    (If the proposed rule change is to take, or to be put into, effect 
pursuant to Section 19(b)(3)(A) of the Act and paragraph (f)(6) of Rule 
19b-4 thereunder, the following paragraph should be used.)
    Because the foregoing proposed rule change does not:
    (i) Significantly affect the protection of investors or the public 
interest;
    (ii) Impose any significant burden on competition; and
    (iii) Become operative for 30 days from the date on which it was 
filed, or such shorter time as the Commission may designate, it has 
become effective pursuant to Section 19(b)(3)(A) of the Act and Rule 
19b-4(f)(6) thereunder.
    At any time within 60 days of the filing of the proposed rule 
change, the Commission summarily may temporarily suspend such rule 
change if it appears to the Commission that such action is necessary or 
appropriate in the public interest, for the protection of investors, or 
otherwise in furtherance of the purposes of the Act.
    (If the proposed rule change is to take, or to be put into, effect 
pursuant to Section 19(b)(3)(A) of the Act and subparagraphs (1)-(5) of 
paragraph (f) of Rule 19b-4 thereunder, the following paragraph should 
be used.)
    The foregoing rule change has become effective pursuant to Section 
19(b)(3)(A) of the Act and paragraph (f) of Rule 19b-4 thereunder. At 
any time within 60 days of the filing of the proposed rule change, the 
Commission summarily may temporarily suspend such rule change if it 
appears to the Commission that such action is necessary or appropriate 
in the public interest, for the protection of investors, or otherwise 
in furtherance of the purposes of the Act.
    (If the proposed rule change is to be considered by the Commission 
pursuant to Section 19(b)(7)(D) of the Act, the following paragraph 
should be used.)
    Within 35 days of the date of publication of this notice in the 
Federal Register or within such longer period (i) as the Commission may 
designate up to 90 days of such date if it finds such longer period to 
be appropriate and publishes its reasons for so finding or (ii) as to 
which the self-regulatory organization consents, the Commission will:
    (A) By order approve such proposed rule change, or
    (B) After consultation with the Commodity Futures Trading 
Commission institute proceedings to determine whether the proposed rule 
change should be disapproved.
    (If the proposed change is filed as a security-based swap 
submission pursuant to Section 3C of the Act, the following paragraph 
should be used.)
    Within 90 days after receiving a security-based swap submission, 
unless the submitting clearing agency agrees to an extension of time 
limitation, the Commission shall by order make its determination 
whether the security-based swap, or group, category, type or class of 
security-based swaps, described in the security-based swap submission 
is required to be cleared. In making its determination that the 
clearing requirement shall apply, the Commission may include such terms 
and conditions to the requirement as the Commission determines to be 
appropriate in the public interest.
    The clearing agency shall post notice on its Web site of any 
clearing requirement that is implemented.
    (If the proposed change is filed as an advance notice pursuant to 
the Payment, Clearing and Settlement Supervision Act, the following 
paragraph should be used.)
    The proposed change may be implemented if the Commission does not 
object to the proposed change within 60 days of the later of (i) the 
date that the proposed change was filed with the Commission or (ii) the 
date that any additional information requested by the Commission is 
received. The clearing agency shall not implement the proposed change 
if the Commission has any objection to the proposed change.
    The Commission may extend period for review by an additional 60 
days if the proposed change raises novel or complex issues, subject to 
the Commission or the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System 
providing the clearing agency with prompt written notice of the 
extension. A proposed change may be implemented in less than 60 days 
from the date the advance notice is filed, or the date further 
information requested by the Commission is received, if the Commission 
notifies the clearing agency in writing that it does not object to the 
proposed change and authorizes the clearing agency to implement the 
proposed change on an earlier date, subject to any conditions imposed 
by the Commission.
    The clearing agency shall post notice on its Web site of proposed 
changes that are implemented.
    (If the proposed change is filed following the implementation of a 
change on an emergency basis pursuant to the Payment, Clearing and 
Settlement Supervision Act, the following paragraph should be used.)
    The clearing agency implemented a proposed change that otherwise 
would be required to be filed as an advance notice because the clearing 
agency determined that (i) an emergency existed and (ii) immediate 
implementation was necessary for the clearing agency to continue to 
provide its services in a safe and sound manner. The Commission may 
require modification or recision of the proposed change if it finds it 
is not consistent with the purposes of the Payment, Clearing and 
Settlement Supervision Act or any applicable rules, orders, or 
standards prescribed under Section 805(a).
    (If the proposal is submitted pursuant to more than one filing 
requirement, the clearing agency shall add the following language in 
addition to the language above.)
    The proposal shall not take effect until all regulatory actions 
required with respect to the proposal are completed.

IV. Solicitation of Comments

    Interested persons are invited to submit written data, views and 
arguments concerning the foregoing, including whether the proposed rule 
change, security-based swap submission, or advance notice is consistent 
with the Act. Comments may be submitted by any of the following 
methods:

Electronic Comments

     Use the Commission's Internet comment form (http://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml); or
     Send an e-mail to [email protected]. Please include 
File Number XX on the subject line.

[[Page 82533]]

Paper Comments

     Send paper comments in triplicate to [Name of Secretary], 
Secretary, Securities and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street, NE., 
Washington, DC 20549.


All submissions should refer to File Number XX. This file number should 
be included on the subject line if e-mail is used. To help the 
Commission process and review your comments more efficiently, please 
use only one method. The Commission will post all comments on the 
Commission's Internet Web site (http://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml). 
Copies of the submission, all subsequent amendments, all written 
statements with respect to the proposed rule change, security-based 
swap submission, or advance notice that are filed with the Commission, 
and all written communications relating to the proposed rule change, 
security-based swap submission, or advance notice between the 
Commission and any person, other than those that may be withheld from 
the public in accordance with the provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be 
available for Web site viewing and printing in the Commission's Public 
Reference Room, 100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC 20549 on official 
business days between the hours of 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. Copies of the 
filing also will be available for inspection and copying at the 
principal office of the [clearing agency]. All comments received will 
be posted without change; the Commission does not edit personal 
identifying information from submissions. You should submit only 
information that you wish to make available publicly. All submissions 
should refer to File Number XX and should be submitted on or before 
January 20, 2011.

    Dated: December 15, 2010.

    For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets, 
pursuant to delegated authority.\173\
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    \173\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).

    By the Commission.
Elizabeth M. Murphy,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2010-32085 Filed 12-29-10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P