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For release on delivery
9:00 a.m. EST
February 10, 2000

Testimony by

Alan Greenspan

Chairman

Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

before the

Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry

United States Senate

February 10, 2000

I am pleased to be here today to underscore the importance of this committee's efforts
to modernize the Commodity Exchange Act (CEA) and to express my support for the
recommendations for amending the act that were contained in the report by the President's
Working Group on Financial Markets entitled Over-the-Counter Derivatives Markets and the
Commodity Exchange Act.
The Need for Legislation
Over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives have come to play an exceptionally important
role in our financial system and in our economy. These instruments allow users to unbundle
risks and allocate them to the investors most willing and able to assume them. A growing
number of financial and nonfinancial institutions have embraced derivatives as an integral part of
their risk capital allocation and profit maximization. In particular, the profitability of derivative
products has been a major factor in the significant gain in the finance industry's share of
American corporate output during the past decadeā€”a reflection of their value to nonfinancial
industry. Indeed, this value added from derivatives itself derives from their ability to enhance the
process of wealth creation throughout our economy.
In light of the importance of OTC derivatives, it is essential that we address the legal
uncertainties created by the possibility that courts could construe OTC derivatives to be futures
contracts subject to the CEA. The legal uncertainties create risks to counterparties in OTC
contracts and, indeed, to our financial system that simply are unacceptable. They have also
impeded initiatives to centralize the trading and clearing of OTC contracts, developments that
have the potential to increase efficiency and reduce risks in OTC transactions. As I shall discuss
more fully later in my remarks, rapid changes in communications technology portend that time is
running out for us to modernize our regulation of financial markets before we lose them and the

-2associated profits and employment opportunities to foreign jurisdictions that impose no such
impediments.
To be sure, the Congress and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC)
have taken steps to address these concerns about the CEA. The Futures Trading Practices Act of
1992 gave the CFTC authority to exempt OTC derivatives from most provisions of the act. In
early 1993 the CFTC used that authority to create an exemption for OTC derivatives that reduced
legal uncertainty for a wide range of transactions and counterparties. Unfortunately, some
subsequent actions by the Commission called into question market participants' understanding of
the terms of the 1993 exemption. Now, under the leadership of Chairman Rainer, the
Commission is considering reaffirming and expanding the terms of the 1993 exemption.
Nonetheless, even with such an important and constructive step by the Commission, legislation
amending the CEA would remain critically important. The greatest legal uncertainty affecting
existing OTC transactions is in the area of securities-based contracts, where the CFTC's
exemptive authority is constrained. Furthermore, as events during the past few years have clearly
demonstrated, regulatory exemptions, unlike statutory exclusions, carry the risk of amendment by
future Commissions.
Principles of Regulation
Imposing government regulation on a market can impair its efficiency. Thus, when
evaluating the need for government regulation, one must clearly identify the public policy
objectives of the regulation. As the working group's report discusses, the primary public policy
purposes of the CEA are to deter market manipulation and to protect investors against fraud and
other unfair practices.

-3We must of course assess whether government regulation is necessary to achieve
those objectives. The regulatory framework of the CEA was designed for the trading of grain
futures by the general public, including retail investors. Because quantities of grain following a
harvest are generally known and limited, it is possible, at least in principle, to manipulate the
price of grain by cornering a market. Furthermore, grain futures prices are widely disseminated
and widely used as the basis for pricing grain transactions off the futures exchanges. The fact
that grain futures serve such a price-discovery function means that if attempts to corner a market
result in price fluctuations, the effects would be felt widely by producers and consumers of grain.
OTC Derivatives
The President's working group has considered whether regulation of OTC derivatives
is necessary to achieve these public policy objectives of the CEA. In the case of financial OTC
derivatives transactions between professional counterparties, the working group has agreed that
such regulation is unnecessary and that such transactions should be excluded from coverage of
the act. Importantly, the recommended exclusion would extend to those securities-based
derivatives that currently are subject to the greatest legal risk from potential application of the
CEA.
The rationale for this position is straightforward. OTC transactions in financial
derivatives are not susceptible to-that is, easily influenced by-manipulation. The vast majority
of contracts are settled in cash, based on a rate or price determined in a separate highly liquid
market with a very large or virtually unlimited deliverable supply. Furthermore, prices
established in OTC transactions do not serve a price-discovery function. Thus, even if the price
of an OTC contract were somehow manipulated, the adverse effects on the economy would be

-4quite limited. With respect to fraud and other unfair practices, the professional counterparties
that use OTC derivatives simply do not require the protections that CEA provides for retail
investors. If professional counterparties are victimized, they can obtain redress under the laws
applicable to contracts generally.
The working group also considered whether the introduction of centralized
mechanisms for the trading and settling of what heretofore have been purely bilaterally
negotiated and settled transactions would give rise to a need for additional regulation. In the case
of electronic trading systems, the working group concluded that regulation under the CEA was
unnecessary and that such systems should be excluded from the act, provided that the contracts
are not based on nonfinancial commodities with finite supplies and that the participants are
limited to sophisticated counterparties trading solely for their own accounts. Electronic trading
of such contracts by such counterparties, it was reasoned, would be no more susceptible to
problems of manipulation and fraud than purely bilateral transactions. It was suggested that
some limited regulation of such systems might become necessary in the future if such trading
systems came to serve a price-discovery function. But it was agreed that creation of a regulatory
system for such systems in anticipation of problems was inappropriate. As I have already noted,
the vast majority of OTC derivatives simply are not susceptible to manipulation. Thus, even if
those contracts come to play a role in price discovery, regulation of the trading mechanism might
still be unnecessary.
In the case of clearing systems for OTC derivatives, the working group concluded that
government oversight is appropriate. Clearing tends to concentrate risks and responsibilities for
risk management in a central party or clearinghouse. Consequently, the effectiveness of the

-5clearinghouse's risk management is critical for the stability of the markets that it serves.
Depending on the types of transactions cleared, such oversight might appropriately be conducted
by the CFTC under the CEA. Alternatively, it might be conducted by the Securities and
Exchange Commission, the Federal Reserve, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, or a
foreign financial regulator that one of the U.S. regulators has determined satisfies appropriate
standards. Provided such government oversight is in place, OTC transactions that would
otherwise be excluded from the CEA should not fall within the ambit of the act because they are
cleared. If market participants conclude that clearing would reduce counterparty risks in OTC
transactions, concerns about legal risks associated with the potential application of the CEA
should not stand in their way.
Traditional Exchanges
The working group's report does not make specific recommendations about the
regulation of traditional exchange-traded futures markets that use open outcry trading or that
allow trading by retail investors. Nevertheless, it calls for a review of the existing regulatory
structures, particularly those applicable to financial futures, to ensure that they are appropriate in
light of the objectives of the act. Consistent with the principles of regulation that I identified
earlier, the report notes that exchange-traded futures should not be subject to regulations that are
unnecessary to achieve the CEA's objectives. The report also concludes that the current
prohibition on single-stock futures can be repealed if issues about the integrity of the underlying
securities market and regulatory arbitrage are resolved.
I want to underscore how important it is for us to address these issues promptly.
I cannot claim to speak with certainty as to how our complex and rapidly moving markets will

-6evolve. But I see a real risk that, if we fail to rationalize our regulation of centralized trading
mechanisms for financial instruments, these markets and the related profits and employment
opportunities will be lost to foreign jurisdictions that maintain the confidence of global investors
without imposing so many regulatory constraints.
My concerns on this score stem from the dramatic advances in information
technology that we see all around us. In markets with significant economies of scale and scope,
like those for standardized financial instruments, there is a tendency toward consolidation or
even natural monopoly. Throughout much of our history this tendency has been restrained by an
inability to communicate information sufficiently quickly, cheaply, and accurately. In recent
years, however, this constraint is being essentially eliminated by advances in
telecommunications. We have not yet seen clear evidence of a trend toward natural monopoly.
But the diffusion of technology often traces an S-shaped curve, first diffusing slowly, but then
rapidly picking up speed. Once we reach the steep segment of that S-curve, it may be too late to
rationalize our regulatory structure.
Already the largest futures exchange in the world is no longer in the American
heartland; instead, it is now in the heart of Europe. To be sure, no U.S. exchange has yet to lose
a major contract to a foreign competitor. But it would be a serious mistake for us to wait for
such unmistakable evidence of a loss of international competitiveness before acting. As our
experience with the vast eurodollar markets demonstrates, once markets with scale and scope
economies are lost, they are very difficult, if not impossible, to recapture.