Thursday, September 25, 2008

US Securities and Exchange Commission targets credit default swaps

IMF Spokesman: Insurer Failure Riskier than Bank

Judith Burns September 25, 2008

US SECURITIES and Exchange Commission chairman Christopher Cox has asked Congress for explicit authority to regulate credit default swaps, plugging a $US58 trillion ($69 trillion) regulatory hole.

Sceptics have two words to say about that: "Good luck".

Cox is not the first regulator to try to grab hold of the rapidly expanding market, which provides protection when borrowers default on bonds or other debt.

A decade ago, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, which oversees futures markets, staked out a claim to regulate credit default swaps, kicking off a two-year debate about the legal status of such instruments.

Congress resolved the legal question in 2000 with the passage of the Commodity Futures Modernisation Act, which barred the CFTC from regulating credit-default swaps.

The law made it "crystal clear" that the CFTC would have no authority over the market, said Michael Greenberger, a professor at University of Maryland Law School and former head of the CFTC's trading and markets division.

The SEC's authority over credit default swaps is limited.

While it has broad anti-fraud authority to investigate market manipulation, its hands are tied when it comes to regulating credit default swaps: it cannot issue rules, including rules that would require public disclosure about the instruments. "It has put them out of bounds to regulators," said Mr Greenberger. He laments that, saying that "somebody at the federal level needs to have that authority".

One concern is the size of the credit default swaps market, which has ballooned rapidly, using non-standard, paper-based contracts that do not trade on exchanges.

Mr Cox says the notional market in credit default swaps stands at $US58 trillion, double the amount outstanding in 2006, yet the market "is regulated by no one".

While such contracts have legitimate uses, some fear that the protection they offer could lead market participants to take risks they might not otherwise. Just who is using the instruments and who is backing them are not clear, however.

Also unclear is whether the parties who sell the protection to swaps buyers have the financial strength to make good on their promises, since there are no minimum standards for capital strength or liquidity.

Scant information on credit default swaps is a worry, prompting efforts by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York to push market participants for better disclosure and creation of a central clearinghouse for credit default swaps trades.

Opportunities for credit default swaps to be abused in insider trading or market manipulation schemes are an issue as well. Since credit default swaps may be used by speculators as well as those seeking protection against a credit default, regulators worry they could be a powerful tool for manipulators.

The SEC announced last week that it is investigating whether brokers, hedge funds and other money managers might have used credit default swaps to pressure stock prices lower, producing profits for short sellers.

Some question whether the SEC has jurisdiction to conduct such probes, and a crucial issue may be whether SEC subpoenas target trading in credit default swaps that are "security-based" or "non-security based", lawyers at the law firm of Schulte, Roth & Zabel wrote in a client alert.

States are jumping into the breach, at least in part. New York State governor David Paterson announced earlier this week that the state would begin regulating a slice of the credit default swap market, starting January 1. New York stepped in after a federal bailout of American International Group, which fumbled because of bad bets on credit default swaps.

"The most promising route to legislation is through the states," said Mr Greenberger. He says a rush toward state regulation could prompt Congress to pre-empt state action with a new federal law.

State regulation of credit default swaps "might actually make federal regulation look attractive", said Robert Claassen, a partner at the law firm Paul Hastings, in New York, who represents brokerage and hedge funds clients.

Yet Mr Claassen worries that the SEC's hands-on regulatory approach is not appropriate for the credit default swap market, where sophisticated counterparties willingly transfer big risks on little more than a handshake.

"That would kill it," or force the market offshore to London or Hong Kong, Mr Claassen warns. He prefers alternatives to improve documentation and form a central clearinghouse, which might require standardisation of swaps contracts.

Industry groups such as the International Swaps and Derivatives Association raised similar concerns in a statement earlier that warned against treating credit default swaps as securities.

Mr Greenberger expects such opposition will prevent Congress from moving this year to regulate credit default swaps.

Putting regulation of credit default swaps on the table a decade ago led to the idea being shot down, Mr Greenberger recalls. In May 1998, the CFTC issued a so-called concept release outlining alternatives that would provide authority to combat fraud and manipulation, and set standards for capital adequacy of those backing the swaps.

Dow Jones Newswires

Source: http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,24397841-20142,00.html