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The
Story Behind the Financial Integrity of the U.S. Futures
Markets
Trading
volume in futures contracts and options on futures on
U.S. markets has risen to more than 500 million
contracts annually. And the dollar value of futures
contracts traded currently exceeds several fold the
dollar value of common stocks traded on all U.S. stock
exchanges.
A
requisite for this growth has been the financial
integrity of futures markets. While trading in futures
contracts obviously involves risks related to price
changes, market participants have historically had
little reason to be concerned about the security of
their funds. Customer losses due to the insolvency of a
futures brokerage firm have been virtually non-existent.
Indeed, such losses have totaled less over 50 years than
the Securities Investor Protection Corporation has paid,
on the average, to reimburse customers of the securities
industry for member firm insolvency losses each year.
For
anyone considering participation in the nation's futures
markets, the reasons behind this continuing and
impressive record of financial soundness are worth
knowing about.
Daily
Cash Settlement
As
futures prices move upward and downward, the market
value of customers' open positions increases and
decreases. Resulting gains and losses from futures
trading are credited or charged to each customer's
account each day following the close of trading. Subject
to existing margin requirements, all gains deposited to
a customer's account through this procedure become
immediately available to the customer.
Margin
Requirements
Buyers
and sellers of futures contracts are required to at all
times maintain sufficient funds on deposit in their
brokerage accounts to cover losses that might be
incurred as a result of price changes. Margin deposits
provide protection for all market participants. In
volatile markets, the exchanges increase margin
requirements accordingly. The availability of such funds
is what makes daily cash settlements possible under all
market conditions.
The
Exchange Clearing Houses
Once
each purchase of a futures contract is precisely matched
to the corresponding sale (a process which occurs each
day), the clearing organization of the exchange where
the contracts are traded becomes the "buyer to
every seller and the seller to every buyer." The
purpose: provide a mechanism that assures the payment of
all gains and collection of all losses on a daily basis.
Capital
Requirements
Every
firm that conducts business with the public as a Futures
Commission Merchant must have and maintain sufficient
capital to meet its financial obligations to its
customers. These requirements are subject to continuous
audit and stringent enforcement. Regulatory agencies
have the authority to determine compliance on a daily
basis and in volatile markets clearing organization can
demand that a firm provide additional capital on one
hour's notice!
Segregated
Accounts
Firms
and principals of firms in the futures industry are
required to maintain their customers' funds and margin
deposits in bank accounts which are totally separate
from their own. Rules further stipulate that such funds
can be used only for the purposes the customers intended
and can at no time be commingled with the firm's funds
or the funds of the firm's principals. Compliance is
strictly enforced and regulators possess power to take
such immediate action as is considered necessary to
protect the security of customers' money.
Transfer
of Market Positions
Should
a firm be determined to be in a financial situation that
could potentially jeopardize the safety of its
customers' funds, it can be directed to immediately
cease operations and transfer all open customer
positions in the market to a firm which is financially
sound. This is to ensure that adequately margined
positions with a troubled firm will not be liquidated at
a time when the customer may not wish for them to be
liquidated.
Regulation
Regulation of the U.S. futures industry is primarily
self-regulation, with the role of the federal Commodity
Futures Trading Commission being principally an
oversight role (to determine that self-regulation is
continuous and effective). Of the total expenditures on
futures regulation, more than three-fifths of the cost
is presently being paid by the exchanges where futures
contracts are traded and by National Futures Association
(NFA), the industrywide self-regulatory organization
authorized by Congress and established in 1982. The
purpose of self-regulation is to assure that those who
conduct futures trading business with the public do so
in a professional, ethical and honest manner.
NFA's responsibilities include screening, testing and
registering persons applying to conduct business in the
futures industry. NFA and the exchanges have
responsibility for auditing and enforcing compliance
with industry rules. These rules encompass financial
requirements, segregation of customers' funds,
accounting procedures, sales activities and, in the case
of the exchanges, floor trading practices.
Although there is no guarantee against customer losses
due to the insolvency of a futures brokerage firm, the
above mechanisms are designed to ensure the financial
integrity of this nation's futures markets, and have in
fact minimized the risk of customer losses.
This
publication is the property of the National
Futures Association. |