78 FR 166 pgs. 52907-52909 - Fees for Reviews of the Rule Enforcement Programs of Designated Contract Markets and Registered Futures Associations

Type: NOTICEVolume: 78Number: 166Pages: 52907 - 52909
FR document: [FR Doc. 2013-20772 Filed 8-26-13; 8:45 am]
Agency: Commodity Futures Trading Commission
Official PDF Version:  PDF Version
Pages: 52907, 52908, 52909

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COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION

Fees for Reviews of the Rule Enforcement Programs of Designated Contract Markets and Registered Futures Associations

AGENCY:

Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

ACTION:

Notice of FY 2013 Schedule of Fees.

SUMMARY:


[top] The Commission charges fees to designated contract markets and registered futures associations to recover the costs incurred by the Commission in the operation of its program of oversight of self-regulatory organization rule enforcement programs, specifically National Futures Association, a page 52908 registered futures association, and the designated contract markets. The calculation of the fee amounts charged for FY 2013 by this notice is based upon an average of actual program costs incurred during FY 2010, 2011, and 2012.

DATES:

Effective date: Each SRO is required to remit electronically the fee applicable to it on or before October 28, 2013.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:

Mark Carney, Chief Financial Officer, Commodity Futures Trading Commission, (202) 418-5477, Three Lafayette Centre, 1155 21st Street NW., Washington, DC 20581. For information on electronic payment, contact Jennifer Fleming, (202) 418-5034, Three Lafayette Centre, 1155 21st Street NW., Washington, DC 20581.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

I. Background Information

A. General

This notice relates to fees for the Commission's review of the rule enforcement programs at the registered futures associations1and designated contract markets (DCM) each of which is a self-regulatory organization (SRO) regulated by the Commission. The Commission recalculates the fees charged each year to cover the costs of operating this Commission program.2All costs are accounted for by the Commission's Budget Program Activity Codes (BPAC) system, formerly the Management Accounting Structure Codes (MASC) system, which records each employee's time for each pay period. The fees are set each year based on direct program costs, plus an overhead factor. The Commission calculates actual costs, then calculates an alternate fee taking volume into account, then charges the lower of the two.3

Footnotes:

1 NFA is the only registered futures association.

2 See section 237 of the Futures Trading Act of 1982, 7 U.S.C. 16a, and 31 U.S.C. 9701. For a broader discussion of the history of Commission fees, see 52 FR 46070, Dec. 4, 1987.

3 58 FR 42643, Aug. 11, 1993, and 17 CFR part 1, app. B.

B. Overhead Rate

The fees charged by the Commission to the SROs are designed to recover program costs, including direct labor costs and overhead. The overhead rate is calculated by dividing total Commission-wide overhead direct program labor costs into the total amount of the Commission-wide overhead pool. For this purpose, direct program labor costs are the salary costs of personnel working in all Commission programs. Overhead costs consist generally of the following Commission-wide costs: indirect personnel costs (leave and benefits), rent, communications, contract services, utilities, equipment, and supplies. This formula has resulted in the following overhead rates for the most recent three years (rounded to the nearest whole percent): 153 percent for fiscal year 2010, 145 percent for fiscal year 2011, and 161 percent for fiscal year 2012.

C. Conduct of SRO Rule Enforcement Reviews

Under the formula adopted by the Commission in 1993, the Commission calculates the fee to recover the costs of its rule enforcement reviews and examinations, based on the three-year average of the actual cost of performing such reviews and examinations at each SRO. The cost of operation of the Commission's SRO oversight program varies from SRO to SRO, according to the size and complexity of each SRO's program. The three-year averaging computation method is intended to smooth out year-to-year variations in cost. Timing of the Commission's reviews and examinations may affect costs-a review or examination may span two fiscal years and reviews and examinations are not conducted at each SRO each year.

As noted above, adjustments to actual costs may be made to relieve the burden on an SRO with a disproportionately large share of program costs. The Commission's formula provides for a reduction in the assessed fee if an SRO has a smaller percentage of United States industry contract volume than its percentage of overall Commission oversight program costs. This adjustment reduces the costs so that, as a percentage of total Commission SRO oversight program costs, they are in line with the pro rata percentage for that SRO of United States industry-wide contract volume.

The calculation is made as follows: The fee required to be paid to the Commission by each DCM is equal to the lesser of actual costs based on the three-year historical average of costs for that DCM or one-half of average costs incurred by the Commission for each DCM for the most recent three years, plus a pro rata share (based on average trading volume for the most recent three years) of the aggregate of average annual costs of all DCMs for the most recent three years. The formula for calculating the second factor is: 0.5a + 0.5 vt = current fee. In this formula, "a" equals the average annual costs, "v" equals the percentage of total volume across DCMs over the last three years, and "t" equals the average annual costs for all DCMs. NFA has no contracts traded; hence, its fee is based simply on costs for the most recent three fiscal years. This table summarizes the data used in the calculations of the resulting fee for each entity:

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Actual total costs FY 2010 FY 2011 FY 2012 3-year average actual costs 3-year % of volume Volume adjusted costs FY 2013 assessed fee
CBOE Futures $ $98,556 29,278 $42,611 0.34 $23,914 $23,914
Chicago Board of Trade 87,953 5,260 238,392 110,535 29.25 280,868 110,535
Chicago Mercantile Exchange 882,542 422,837 757,347 687,575 50.14 730,502 687,575
ELX Futures 34,593 11,531 0.341 8,397 8,397
ICE Futures U.S. 94,043 17,624 221,813 111,160 3.20 80,237 80,237
Kansas City Board of Trade 227,296 30,976 34,335 97,536 0.18 50,133 50,133
Minneapolis Grain Exchange 88,790 60,897 49,896 0.05 25,321 25,321
NADEX North American 11,293 3,764 0.000 1,882 1,882
New York Mercantile Exchange 596,767 136,565 7,411 246,915 15.93 246,340 246,340
New York LIFFE 416,069 71,317 162,462 0.42 84,495 84,495
One Chicago 55,755 18,585 0.141 10,382 10,382
Subtotal 1,888,601 1,216,678 1,522,431 1,542,570 100 1,542,470 1,329,210
National Futures Association 1,206,393 416,615 487,328 703,445 703,445
Total 3,094,994 1,633,293 2,009,759 2,246,015 2,032,655


An example of how the fee is calculated for one exchange, the Chicago Board of Trade, is set forth here:

a. Actual three-year average costs equal 110,535.

b. The alternative computation is: (.5) (110,535) + (.5) (.292) (1,542,570) = 280,868.

c. The fee is the lesser of a or b; in this case 110,535.

As noted above, the alternative calculation based on contracts traded is not applicable to NFA because it is not a DCM and has no contracts traded. The Commission's average annual cost for conducting oversight review of the NFA rule enforcement program during fiscal years 2010 through 2012 was 708,424 (one-third of 2,125,273). The fee to be paid by the NFA for the current fiscal year is 708,424.

II. Schedule of Fees

Therefore, fees for the Commission's review of the rule enforcement programs at the registered futures associations and DCMs regulated by the Commission are as follows:

2013 fee lesser of actual or calculated fee
CBOE Futures $23,914
Chicago Board of Trade 110,535
Chicago Mercantile Exchange 687,575
ELX Futures 8,397
ICE Futures U.S. 80,237
Kansas City Board of Trade 50,133
Minneapolis Grain Exchange 25,321
NADEX North American 1,882
New York Mercantile Exchange 246,340
New York LIFFE 84,495
One Chicago 10,382
Subtotal 1,329,210
National Futures Association 703,445
Total 2,032,655

III. Payment Method

The Debt Collection Improvement Act (DCIA) requires deposits of fees owed to the government by electronic transfer of funds. See 31 U.S.C. 3720. For information about electronic payments, please contact Jennifer Fleming at (202) 418-5034 or jfleming@cftc.gov, or see the CFTC Web site at www.cftc.gov, specifically, www.cftc.gov/cftc/cftcelectronicpayments.htm.

Authority:

7 U.S.C. 16a.

Issued in Washington, DC, on August 21, 2013, by the Commission.

Christopher J. Kirkpatrick,

Deputy Secretary of the Commission.

[FR Doc. 2013-20772 Filed 8-26-13; 8:45 am]

BILLING CODE 6351-01-P