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For release on delivery
8 40 a m EST
February 21, 1997

Remarks by

Alan Greenspan

Chairman, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

at the

Financial Markets Conference

of the

Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta

Coral Gables, Florida

February 21, 1997

I am pleased to participate once again in the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta's annual
Financial Markets Conference

As in previous years, the Reserve Bank has developed a

conference program that is quite timely Changes in technology have permitted the
development in recent years of increasingly diverse financial instruments and intensely
competitive market structures The rapid evolution of products and markets has led many to
conclude that market regulatory structures, many of which were established in the 1920s and
1930s, have become increasingly outdated Some see new products and markets not covered
by government regulation and fear the consequences of so-called "regulatory gaps" Others
see old government regulations applied to new instruments and markets and fear the
unintended consequences of what seems unnecessary and burdensome regulation
Nowhere have these tensions been more evident than in the ongoing debate over the
appropriate government regulation of derivative contracts, a debate which has varied in
intensity but has never fully subsided for at least ten years Recent efforts by members of the
Senate Agriculture Committee to clarify and rationalize the regulation of derivative contracts
under the Commodity Exchange Act have once again placed these contentious issues on the
front burner In my remarks today I shall proffer a set of considerations that I find quite
valuable as a guide to decisions about the need for government regulation of financial
markets I shall then review the history of government regulation of derivative contracts and
markets in the United States and consider the current regulatory structure for those products
and markets in light of these considerations

Market Regulation
I would argue that the first imperative when evaluating market regulation is to
enunciate clearly the public policy objectives that government regulation would be intended to
promote What market characteristics do policymakers seek to encourage? Efficiency? Fair
and open access? What phenomena do we wish to discourage or eliminate? Fraud,
manipulation, or other unfair practices? Systemic instability? Without explicit answers to
these questions, government regulation is unlikely to be effective

More likely, it will prove

unnecessary, burdensome, and perhaps even contrary to what more careful consideration
would reveal to be the underlying objectives
A second imperative, once public policy objectives are clearly specified, is to evaluate
whether government regulation is necessary for those purposes In making such evaluations,
it is critically important to recognize that no market is ever truly unregulated The selfinterest of market participants generates private market regulation

Thus, the real question is

not whether a market should be regulated Rather, the real question is whether government
intervention strengthens or weakens private regulation If incentives for private market
regulation are weak or if market participants lack the capabilities to pursue their interests
effectively, then the introduction of government regulation may improve regulation But if
private market regulation is effective, then government regulation is at best unnecessary

At

worst, the introduction of government regulation may actually weaken the effectiveness of
regulation if government regulation is itself ineffective or undermines incentives for private
market regulation We must be aware that government regulation unavoidably involves some

element of moral hazard--if private market participants believe that government is protecting
their interests, their own efforts to protect their interests will diminish to some degree
Whether government regulation is needed, and if so, what form of government
regulation is optimal, depends critically on a market's characteristics A "one-size-fits-all"
approach to financial market regulation is almost never appropriate The degree and type of
government regulation needed, if any, depends on the types of instruments traded, the types of
market participants, and the nature of the relationships among market participants

To cite

just one example, a government regulatory framework designed to protect retail investors
from fraud or insolvency of brokers is unlikely to be necessary—and is almost sure to be
suboptimal—if applied to a market in which large institutions transact on a principal-toprincipal basis
Recognizing that a one-size-fits-all approach is seldom appropriate, it may be useful to
offer transactors a choice between seeking the benefits and accepting the burdens of
government regulation, or forgoing those benefits and avoiding those burdens by transacting
in financial markets that are only privately regulated In such circumstances, the privately
regulated markets in effect provide a market test of the net benefits of government regulation
Migration of activity from government-regulated to privately regulated markets sends a signal
to government regulators that many transactors believe the costs of regulation exceed the
benefits

When such migration occurs, government regulators should consider carefully

whether less regulation or different regulation would provide a better cost-benefit tradeoff
without compromising public policy objectives

Historical Development of U.S. Government Regulation of Derivative Markets
Before evaluating the current regulation of derivatives in light of these considerations,
it is quite useful to know something of the history of these instruments and their regulation
Derivative contracts (forward contracts and options) appear to have been utilized throughout
American history Indeed, it will probably come as a surprise even to this audience that 15 to
25 percent of trades on the New York Stock Exchange in its early years were time bargains,
that is, forward contracts, rather than transactions for cash settlement (in those days, same-day
settlement) or regular-way settlement (next-day settlement) In the case of commodities,
forward contracts for corn, wheat, and other grains came into common use by 1850 in
Chicago, where they were known as "to arrive" contracts The first organized futures
exchange in the United States, the Chicago Board of Trade, evolved through the progressive
standardization of the terms of to arrive contracts, including lot sizes, grades of grain, and
delivery periods Trading apparently was centralized on the Board of Trade by 1859, and in
1865 it set out detailed rules for the trading of highly standardized contracts quite similar to
the grain futures contracts traded today
The first recorded instance of federal government regulation of derivatives was the
Anti-Gold Futures Act of 1864, which prohibited the trading of gold futures

The government

had been unhappy that its fiat currency issues, the infamous greenbacks, were at that time
trading at a substantial discount to gold Unwilling to accept this result as evidence of failure
of the government's monetary policies, Congress concluded that it was evidence of a serious
failure of private market regulation

In the event, Congress's action was followed by a further

sharp drop in the value of the greenbacks

Although it took the government many years to

restore monetary policy to a sound footing, it took Congress only two weeks to conclude that
its prohibition of gold futures was having unintended consequences and to repeal the act
It has been the trading of agricultural futures, however, that from its inception has
produced calls for government intervention

Throughout the late nineteenth and early

twentieth centuries, farmers were often opposed to futures trading, particularly during periods
when prices of their products were low or declining They presumed that dreaded speculators
were depressing their prices The states were the first to respond to calls for government
regulation of futures

For the most part, state legislation on futures was limited to

prohibitions on bucket shops, that is, operations that purport to act as brokers of exchangetraded futures but "bucket" rather than execute their clients' trades

An Illinois statute of

1874 signaled early concerns about market integrity The statute criminalized the spreading
of false rumors to influence commodity prices and attempts to corner commodity markets
After its misadventure with futures regulation during the Civil War, the federal
government appears not to have given further consideration to regulating futures trading until
1883, when a bill was introduced in Congress to prohibit use of the mails to market futures
Thereafter, repeated efforts were made to regulate or prohibit trading of futures and options
on agricultural products When the Agriculture Department reviewed the Congressional
Record in 1920, it found that 164 measures of this sort had previously been introduced
These efforts culminated in passage of the Futures Trading Act of 1921 That act was
promptly declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court, on the grounds that it was a
regulatory measure masquerading as a tax measure But in 1922 Congress restated the
purpose of the 1921 act as "an act for the prevention and removal of obstructions and burdens

upon interstate commerce in grain, by regulating transactions on grain futures exchanges," and
renamed it the Grain Futures Act of 1922 As an explicitly regulatory measure, it was later
upheld by the Court
The objective of the Grain Futures Act was to reduce or eliminate "sudden or
unreasonable fluctuations" in the prices of grain on futures exchanges The framers of the act
believed that such sudden or unreasonable fluctuations of grain futures prices reflected their
susceptibility to "speculation, manipulation, or control" Moreover, such fluctuations in price
were seen to have broad ramifications that affected the national public interest Grain futures
contracts were widely used by producers and distributors of grain to hedge the risks of price
fluctuations

Futures prices also were widely disseminated and widely used as the basis for

pricing grain transactions off the futures exchanges Indeed, given the relative size of the
agricultural sector of the time, fluctuations in futures prices no doubt had the potential to
affect the economy as a whole
It is not entirely clear that the view that futures trading was exacerbating volatility in
agricultural prices was well-founded

To be sure, evidence abounds that market participants

talked incessantly about corners and bear raids Moreover, the design of the contracts may,
indeed, have made such contracts susceptible to manipulation

However, empirical studies of

more recent experience cast doubt on whether the use of derivatives adds to price volatility
And, while charges of market manipulation are heard to this day, they typically are difficult,
if not impossible, to prove Professional speculators were easy to blame for fluctuations in
market prices that actually reflected fundamental shifts in supply or demand, as they are
today The market clearing process is a very abstract concept It is sometimes far easier to

envisage price changes as the consequence of individual manipulators

Indeed, for a lot of

19th century ring traders, it was some measure of manhood (women were few) that they
could squeeze or corner a market The evidence suggests that this was largely Walter Middytype fantasy
In any event, the Grain Futures Act of 1922 established many of the key elements of
our current regulatory framework for derivatives In general, the act was designed to confine
futures trading to regulated futures exchanges The act made it unlawful to trade futures on
exchanges other than those designated as contract markets by the Secretary of Agriculture
The Secretary was permitted to so designate an exchange only if certain conditions were met
These included the establishment of procedures for recordkeeping and reporting of futures
transactions, for prevention of dissemination of false or misleading crop or market
information, and for prevention of price manipulation or cornering of markets Finally, the
act recognized the need to permit bona fide derivatives transactions to be executed off of the
regulated exchanges, it explicitly excluded forward contracts for the delivery of grain from
the exchange-trading requirement Forward contracts were essentially defined as contracts for
future delivery to which farmers or farm interests were counterparties or in which the seller,
if not a farmer, owned the grain at the time of making the contract
The next major piece of federal legislation affecting futures regulation was the
Commodity Exchange Act (CEA) of 1936 As in the case of the Grain Futures Act, an
important objective of the CEA was to discourage forms of speculation that were seen as
exacerbating price volatility

In addition, the CEA introduced provisions designed primarily

to protect small investors in commodity futures, whose participation had been increasing and

was viewed as beneficial

These provisions included requirements for the registration of

futures commission merchants (FCMs), that is, futures brokers, and for the segregation of
customer funds from FCM funds

The CEA also expanded the coverage of futures regulation

to cover contracts for cotton, rice, and certain other specifically enumerated commodities
traded on futures exchanges, and prohibited the trading of options on commodities traded on
futures exchanges
The federal regulatory framework for derivatives market regulation then remained
substantially unchanged until 1974, when Congress enacted the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission Act The act did not make any fundamental changes in the objectives of
derivatives regulation

However, it expanded the scope of the CEA quite significantly

In

addition to creating the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) as an independent
agency and giving the CFTC exclusive jurisdiction over commodity futures and options, the
1974 amendments expanded the CEA's definition of "commodity" beyond a specific list of
agricultural commodities to include "all other goods and articles, except onions,

and all

services, rights, and interests in which contracts for future delivery are presently or in the
future dealt in " In one respect, this was sweeping deregulation, in that it explicitly allowed
the trading on futures exchanges of contracts on virtually any underlying assets, including
financial instruments

Only onion futures, banned in 1958 as the presumed favorite plaything

of manipulators, remained beyond the pale In another respect, however, this was a sweeping
extension of regulation

Given this broad definition of a commodity and an equally broad

interpretation of what constitutes a futures contract, this change brought a tremendous range
of off-exchange transactions potentially within the scope of the CEA In particular, it could

8

be interpreted to extend the broad prohibition on off-exchange trading of futures to an
immense volume of diverse transactions that never had been traded on exchanges
The potential for the legality of a wider range of transactions to be called into question
did not go unnoticed during debate on the 1974 act In particular, the Treasury Department
proposed language excluding off-exchange derivative transactions in foreign currency,
government securities, and certain other financial instruments from the newly expanded CEA
This proposal was adopted by Congress and is known as the Treasury Amendment

In

proposing the amendment, Treasury was primarily concerned with protecting foreign exchange
markets from what it considered unnecessary and potentially harmful regulation

The foreign

exchange markets clearly have quite different characteristics from markets for agricultural
futures-the markets for the major currencies are deep and, as some central banks have
learned the hard way, they are extremely difficult to manipulate

Furthermore, participants in

those markets, primarily banks and other financial institutions, and large corporations, would
not seem to need, and certainly are not seeking, the protection of the CEA Thus, there was,
and is, no reason to presume that the regulatory framework of the CEA needs to be applied to
the foreign exchange markets to achieve the public policy objectives that motivated the CEA
Indeed, the wholesale foreign exchange markets provide a clear and compelling example of
how private parties can regulate markets quite effectively without government assistance
What the Treasury did not envision and the Treasury Amendment did not protect was
the subsequent development and spectacular growth of privately negotiated derivative
contracts—swaps, forwards, and options on interest rates, exchange rates, and prices of
commodities and securities

The rapid growth of these instruments primarily reflected the

value-added in specially crafted, individualized contracts that the standardized, one-size-fits-all
contracts traded on exchanges did not provide By the mid-1980s, concerns already had
surfaced that such contracts could prove unenforceable if they were found to be illegal offexchange futures

The CFTC recognized that the development of swaps and similar contracts

provided important public benefits and eventually issued various rules and interpretations
intended to allay concerns about their enforceability Nonetheless, substantial legal uncertainty
about the reach of the CEA persisted Moreover, some were questioning the CFTC's
interpretations of the CEA and its authority to exempt transactions that were futures from the
exchange-trading requirement
Congress sought to provide legal certainty for interest rate swaps and many of the
other questioned transactions through a provision in the Futures Trading Practices Act of
1992 That provision granted the CFTC explicit authority to exempt off-exchange
transactions between "appropriate persons" from most provisions of the CEA, including the
exchange-trading requirement, "appropriate persons" are regulated financial intermediaries,
other larger businesses, and others deemed appropriate by the CFTC The CFTC promptly
utilized this authority to exempt interest rate swaps and most other OTC derivative contracts
from the exchange-trading requirement and most other provisions of the CEA However, the
CFTC reserved its anti-fraud and anti-manipulation authority with respect to any swaps that
might be regarded as futures and also included provisions that would deny legal certainty to
swaps that were executed through an exchange or cleared through a clearing house Later,
the CFTC, which had been directed by Congress to promote fair competition between futures
exchanges and the off-exchange markets, initiated a pilot program under which the futures

10

exchanges would be permitted to develop a new class of exchange-traded markets that would
be exempt from some provisions of the CEA However, no exchange has taken advantage of
this opportunity
Despite the CFTC's efforts, uncertainty about the scope of the CEA and debate about
the appropriateness of the CEA regulatory framework have continued Litigation has called
into question the types of contracts and counterparties that are covered by the Treasury
Amendment

Because Congress prohibited the CFTC from exempting equity derivatives from

the CEA, the enforceability of some OTC equity swaps has remained uncertain

And the

futures exchanges continue to argue that unnecessary and burdensome regulation is making it
impossible for them to compete with off-exchange markets in the United States and with
foreign futures exchanges
Appropriate Regulation of Derivatives Markets
Solutions to these problems can be identified by applying the key considerations
relating to market regulation that I set out earlier There appears to be a fair degree of
consensus on the objectives of public policy Most would agree that the objectives of
derivatives regulation are endeavoring to ensure the integrity of markets, especially deterring
manipulation, and to protect market participants from losses resulting from fraud or the
insolvency of counterparties

Where there is disagreement is on the need for government

regulation to achieve these objectives, and where government regulation is agreed to be
appropriate, on whether the CEA provides the optimal regulatory framework
In the case of the institutional off-exchange derivatives markets, it seems abundantly
clear that private market regulation is quite effectively and efficiently achieving what have

11

been identified as the public policy objectives of government regulation
evidence that the prices of OTC contracts have been manipulated

I am aware of no

Participants in these

markets have been savvy enough to limit their activity to contracts that are very difficult to
manipulate The vast majority of OTC contracts are settled in cash rather than through
delivery

The cash settlement typically is based on a rate or price in a highly liquid market

with a very large or even unlimited deliverable supply, for example, LIBOR or the spot
dollar-yen exchange rate Those OTC contracts that require delivery typically limit the costs
of failing to deliver to actual damages Thus, attempts to corner an OTC market, even if
successful, could not induce sellers to pay significantly higher prices to offset their contracts
or to purchase the underlying assets In any event, prices of off-exchange contracts are not
used directly or indiscriminately as the basis for pricing other transactions, so any price
distortions would not affect other buyers or sellers of the underlying asset and certainly would
not affect the economy as a whole
Institutional participants in the off-exchange derivative markets also have demonstrated
their ability to protect themselves from losses from fraud and counterparty insolvencies
Participants in those markets have insisted that dealers have financial strength sufficient to
warrant a credit rating of A or higher When such dealers have engaged in deceptive
practices, their victims have been able to obtain restitution by going to court or simply
threatening to do so The threat of legal damages provides dealers with incentives to avoid
misconduct A far more powerful incentive, however, is the fear of loss of the dealer's good
reputation, without which it cannot compete effectively, regardless of its financial strength or
financial engineering capabilities Institutional participants in the off-exchange markets also

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have demonstrated their ability to manage credit risks quite effectively through careful
evaluation of counterparties, the setting of internal credit limits, and the judicious use of
netting agreements and collateral Actual losses to institutional counterparties in the United
States from dealer defaults have been negligible
Thus, there appears to be no need for government regulation of off-exchange
derivative transactions between institutional counterparties

In particular, the CEA, which was

designed for markets with completely different characteristics, seems an inappropriate
framework for regulating such transactions Because many retail investors may lack the
ability to evaluate their counterparties effectively, some government regulation of offexchange transactions with such counterparties may be appropriate to protect them against
unrecoverable losses from fraud or dealer insolvencies But, even for those transactions, it is
not obvious that the CEA provides the best regulatory framework

In particular, it seems to

me that the marketing of off-exchange derivatives to retail customers by banks and brokerdealers is more appropriately regulated by the banking regulatory agencies and the Securities
and Exchange Commission, respectively

There is no evidence that the existing regulatory

frameworks applicable to these institutions are not adequate to protect retail counterparties to
off-exchange derivative contracts

Some may argue that CEA-style regulation of all entities

marketing derivatives to retail counterparties is necessary to achieve a level playing field for
competitors

However, a level playing field does not require identical regulation of all

competitors Nor would identical regulation of one product line of multi-product firms by
itself achieve a truly level playing field

13

The government regulatory framework for exchange-trading may also need to be reexamined

As we have seen, the key provisions of the CEA were put in place in the 1920s

and 1930s to regulate the trading of grain futures by the general public, including retail
investors

Since then, U S futures exchanges have undergone profound changes

Financial

futures, not agricultural futures, now account for the great bulk of activity on the exchanges
For many of the actively traded financial contracts, participation by retail investors is
negligible

Finally, in recent years trading volumes for most financial futures have been

declining or growing very slowly, while the volume of off-exchange financial derivatives
transactions has continued to grow very rapidly

As I noted earlier, such migration of activity

from regulated to unregulated markets presumably reflects in part the value-added of specially
crafted, risk-unbundling contracts But almost surely as well many market participants
perceive the costs of government regulation of exchanges to exceed the benefits
Specifically, we need to think carefully about the characteristics of exchange trading
per se that differentiate such markets from the off-exchange markets One argument is that
the exchange markets perform a price-basing or price-discovery function that off-exchange
markets do not This argument probably is valid for certain exchange-traded agricultural
contracts

However, I am not aware that any significant volume of off-exchange transactions

is being priced solely on the basis of prices of exchange-traded financial contracts In the
case of interest rate and exchange rate contracts, deep and liquid cash markets provide an
alternative source of information that market participants find is quite adequate for pricediscovery purposes

14

Another argument points to the existence of clearing houses for exchange-traded
contracts, which act as counterparties to all trades on their affiliated exchanges and provide
centralized management of counterparty risks To be sure, clearing houses concentrate and
mutualize risks in ways that make regulation of clearing houses desirable from a systemic
stability perspective But here again, we need to recognize the potential effectiveness of
private market regulation

Any government regulation of clearing houses must be carefully

designed to avoid impairing private regulation This may not be possible if a one-size-fits-all
regulatory approach is adopted

Clearing houses that recently have been established for

foreign exchange contracts have involved innovative approaches to risk management that
differ from the approaches of futures exchanges in ways that are intended to preserve the
private market discipline that has proven so effective

One way of ensuring the necessary

regulatory flexibility would be to allow such clearing houses a choice of federal regulatory
regimes In addition to the CFTC, federal banking regulators or the Securities and Exchange
Commission would seem quite capable of providing oversight to clearing houses for
exchange-traded or OTC instruments
It would also seem unwise to unnecessarily impede competition in the provision of
centralized trading or clearing facilities to derivatives transactions that are currently negotiated
and cleared bilaterally

In particular, if institutional counterparties desire such services,

futures exchanges should be allowed to compete as providers The trading and clearing
systems for institutional markets undoubtedly should be kept separate from the existing
futures trading and clearing systems But no further restrictions on their ability to compete
would seem necessary

In particular, it is not obvious why otherwise identical contracts could

15

not be traded on regulated exchanges open to the general public and on affiliated unregulated
exchanges open only to institutions Institutional counterparties then would be free to choose
whether to seek the benefits and accept the burdens of regulation under the CEA
Summary
To sum up, the need for U S government regulation of derivatives instruments and
markets should be carefully re-examined

The application of the Commodity Exchange Act to

off-exchange transactions between institutions seems wholly unnecessary—private market
regulation appears to be achieving public policy objectives quite effectively and efficiently
There also appears to be a strong case for allowing the centralized trading or clearing of
financial derivatives that currently are bilaterally negotiated and cleared, and such evolution
should not be obstructed by the threat of application of the CEA Although a case can be
made for regulating clearing systems for such markets, alternatives to regulation under the
CEA should be offered to avoid the potential dangers of a one-size-fits-all regulatory
approach Furthermore, subject to a few restrictions, futures exchanges should be allowed to
create affiliates to compete as providers of such services I would note in conclusion that the
bipartisan legislation recently introduced in the Senate manifests a willingness to contemplate
such fundamental changes in government regulation

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