speeches · February 6, 1991
Speech
Alan Greenspan · Chair
For release on delivery
9:00 a.m. E.S.T.
February 7, 1991
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 7, 1991
Mr. Chairman, members of the Committee, I welcome the
opportunity to appear on this panel this morning to discuss Title III of
S.207, "The Intermarket Coordination Act of 1991". This bill addresses
important issues affecting the integrity of our financial markets, and I
compliment the committee on the contributions it has made toward better
understanding of these issues and toward strengthening the regulatory
system. Many of the questions addressed in this bill are extremely
complex, and any proposed changes inevitably involve tradeoffs on which
there will be disagreement. The compromises which members of this
committee and of the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs
have made in putting together this package have been reached in the
spirit of bridging differences in viewpoint and moving ahead
My remarks this morning will focus, as you have requested, on
two provisions of the Act that are particularly pertinent to the Board
of Governors of the Federal Reserve System The first is federal
authority to set margins for stock-index futures contracts, and the
second is the "exclusivity provision" of the Commodities Exchange Act
(CEA). The Board's views on both these issues have been presented in
testimony before, and letters to, the Congress on several occasions in
the past, and my statement today will expand a bit on these views in the
context of the current proposals Let me begin with margins
Margin Authority on Stock-Index Futures
As I have noted in previous testimony, the Board considers the
primary purpose of margins to be to protect the clearing organizations,
brokers, and other intermediaries from credit losses that may result
from adverse movements in prices Without appropriate safeguards,
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losses can lead to the failure of key market participants, jeopardize
contract performance, and threaten the integrity not only of the market
in question but other markets as well Margins, along with capital
requirements, liquidity requirements, position limits, loss sharing
agreements, and other operational controls, are tools designed to limit
the exposure of financial exchanges and participants to problems that
may arise in the markets. Containment of risk through the use of these
tools is essential to maintain public confidence in the soundness of our
financial markets and to avoid excessive strains on our clearing and
payments systems.
Recognition of the important role for margins leads to the
critical operational question of how one determines the adequate level
of margins for prudential purposes Clearly if margins are set too low,
markets and clearing systems will be exposed to undesirable levels of
risk. On the other hand, if margins are set much higher than necessary
for prudential purposes, liquidity in the markets will be reduced and
competitive pressures may drive business to less regulated markets,
probably offshore.
For some time, the Board has been of the view that the
exchanges and self regulatory organizations (SROs) are well positioned
for developing and refining margin policy These organizations have a
strong economic interest in maintaining the integrity of their markets
and membership, as well as a close familiarity with the instruments and
trading practices in their markets Moreover, they have the flexibility
to adjust margin requirements quickly in response to changing economic,
financial, or institutional developments While we continue to believe
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that the SROs should play a lead role in structuring margin policy, the
Board believes that federal oversight is important to ensure that
margins on stocks and stock-index futures are adequate to protect
against a wide range of conditions
The need for federal regulation of margins on stock-index
futures has become clearer in recent years, especially in light of
behavior during periods of market stress In particular, I expressed
concerns last year that the self regulatory organizations tended to set
margins at levels too low in periods of price stability and then were
compelled to raise them when market prices moved sharply Such behavior
tends to exacerbate liquidity pressures on market participants and their
creditors and the clearing and payment systems in periods of unusual
price volatility To avoid the possibility that margin decisions of a
given exchange or clearing organization may not fully take into account
implications across other markets and payments systems, a federal agency
should have ultimate oversight authority. The Intermarket Coordination
Act provides for just such federal responsibility, and the Board
endorses this concept.
Nonetheless, while the Board believes that federal oversight is
necessary, we have been of the view that this authority should rest with
either the CFTC or the SEC Let me explain our reasons for this view
I noted earlier that margin requirements are but one of many
interdependent tools that play a role in the management of risk Other
elements in this process include, for example, capital requirements,
surveillance activities, maintenance of guarantee funds, and financial
support agreements These factors have an important bearing on the
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overall level of risk, associated with any given level of margins.
Indeed, the margins applied against stock-index futures are only one
part of the total amount of margin held to protect the integrity of
the clearing organizations and member firms. The Board has been of the
view that the agency or agencies that have overall responsibility for
supervision of the institutions and the exchanges which trade these
instruments can bring to bear appreciably more day-to-day information in
these areas. These agencies could best take into account other elements
of the risk management system when choosing appropriate margin levels
Which agency, the CFTC or the SEC, is better suited for
oversight of stock-index futures is less clear to us. The CFTC can be
viewed as the better choice because of its oversight of the futures
exchanges and their clearing organizations On the other hand, the
strong price and trading linkage among stocks and stock-derivative
options and futures products presents a case for having a single
regulator for all equity-related products The SEC, to whom the Board,
by rule, already has delegated oversight authority on options products
and which has prudential responsibility for broker/dealers and
securities markets, could be considered as a logical choice to foster
consistency of margins across equity-related products We also
appreciate that the Federal Reserve's position as the authority for
setting margins on stocks and stock options places us in a position to
achieve consistency across all equity-related instruments
The Board recognizes the difficulty and the urgency of
resolving this particular question In these circumstances, while we
prefer that the authority rest with one of the other agencies for the
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reasons discussed, if Congress were to decide to assign this to the
Federal Reserve, the Board would, of course, endeavor to discharge the
responsibility for margins on stock-index futures in a careful and
serious manner In so doing, we would work closely with the other
agencies that have broader authority over the entities that margins are
intended to protect, in this regard, the proposed legislation appears to
provide appropriate flexibility for implementing such a system.
Exclusivity and Hybrid Instruments
Let me turn now to the provisions of the bill that deal with
the question of the CFTC s "exclusive jurisdiction" over futures
products The Board, as you know, has had serious concerns about the
current interpretation of the Commodities Exchange Act that requires any
contract with an element of futurity to be traded only on a CFTC-
regulated exchange Interpreted broadly, any financial contract has
some element of futurity, hence this provision affects a wide range of
existing and new financial products that might be offered outside of the
futures exchanges, including some depository instruments that are
subject to other regulatory safeguards. The potential for the strict
application of this principle to stifle the development of new products
was demonstrated when the courts ruled that index-participations fell
under the futures definition and could not be offered by the securities
exchanges
The proposed bill would modify the exclusivity restriction to
allow certain hybrid products to trade either on a securities exchange
or a futures exchange In addition, it would give the CFTC authority to
exempt certain other products The amendment explicitly directs the
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CFTC to exempt swap agreements and deposit accounts offered by insured
and regulated financial institutions, if it finds such exemptions are
not contrary to the public interest I believe these are positive steps
that will provide the CFTC with greater ability to avoid conflicts such
as have occurred in the past and to limit the risk that disputes over
regulatory jurisdiction will have to be dealt with in the courts More
importantly, it should reassure the markets that financial innovations
and new products will not be curbed by ambiguities in the regulatory
process.
Cite this document
APA
Alan Greenspan (1991, February 6). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19910207_greenspan
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_19910207_greenspan,
author = {Alan Greenspan},
title = {Speech},
year = {1991},
month = {Feb},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19910207_greenspan},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}