substance vs. form: rethinking the scope of dodd-frank`s end-user
Transcription
substance vs. form: rethinking the scope of dodd-frank`s end-user
SUBSTANCE VS. FORM: RETHINKING THE SCOPE OF DODD-FRANK'S END-USER CLEARING EXCEPTION IN LIGHT OF SYSTEMIC RISK David Hamid* INTRODUCTION .............................................. I. DERIVATIVES ......................................... A. Overview of Derivatives and CDSs .............. B. "Naked Swaps, "Speculation, and Social Utility ...... II. SYSTEMIC RISK .... ................. ...... A. Defining Systemic Risk......... ............. i. Systemic Risk and the Financial Crisis of 2008 .... ................... ..... B. FinancialInstitutions, Non-financial institutions, and Systemic risk .................. ........ i. The view that financial institutions are inherently systemically riskier than nonfinancial institutions.......................... ii. Systemic Risk is Not Generated Uniformly Across All Financial Institutions ............ iii. Non-Financial Institutions and Systemic risk... iv. Speculation and Systemic risk............. v. Lack of Transparency and Systemic Risk ....... III. DODD-FRANK AND CALLS FOR REFORM ............... A. Overview of Dodd-Frank ..................... B. Title VII. Bringing Light to the OTC Derivatives Market. ................................. i. Classifying Swaps and Allocating Jurisdiction .. ii. Registration of Dealers and Major Participants . iii. Clearing, Trading, and Reporting ........... IV. ANALYSIS & SCRUTINY OF THE END-USER EXCEPTION. A. Statutory Requirements &rRulemaking Clarification . . 184 188 188 197 202 202 203 207 208 211 211 214 214 216 216 218 220 222 224 226 226 * Candidate for J.D., 2014, Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law; Bachelor of Arts, 2008, New York University. I would like to express my deepest gratitude to my family for their love, encouragement, and words of wisdom, not only over the course of this Note until the very end, but also throughout my law school experience. 183 184 CARDOZO PUB. LAW POLICY 6'- ETHICSJ. B. Critique ..... i. ii. V 12:183 [Vol. ................................. 229 To the extent that an end-user is neither a SD nor MSP, it should be allowed to avail itself of the exception, irrespective of its financial or ..................... non-financial nature . Even assuming that financial institutions are somehow inherently systemically riskier than non-financial institutions (while controlling for interconnectedness and quality of exposures), the logic of the end-user exception is internally inconsistent .................................. 229 231 iii. Any end-user exception must always be formulated against the backdrop of DoddFrank's goals of preventing and mitigating systemic risk ............................ 234 INTRODUCTION We view [credit derivatives] as time bombs, both for the parties that deal in them and the economic system. . . . We try to be alert to any sort of megacatastropherisk, and that posture may make us unduly apprehensive about the burgeoning quantities oflong-term derivatives contracts and the massive amount of uncollateralizedreceivables that aregrowing alongside. In our view, however, derivatives are financial weapons of mass destruction, carryingdangers that, while now latent, are potentially lethal.1 In Berkshire Hathaway's annual report in 2002, company chairman and CEO Warren Buffet warned investors and the public of the impending dangers surrounding a ballooning credit derivatives market. Famously dubbing them "time bombs" 2 and "financial weapons of mass destruction,"3 Buffet believed the large amount of credit risk that grew increasingly concentrated among a relatively few derivatives dealers presented the possibility of widespread systemic risk. He explained the company's long-term attempts to remove its insurance subsidiary from the business of derivatives contracts entirely, but acknowledged that it would likely be many years before such a goal could be accomplished: 1 Berkshire Hathaway Inc. 2002 Annual Report, BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY, 31, 2002), http://www.berkshirehathaway.com/2002ar/2002ar.pdf. 2 Id. at 13. 3 Id. at 15. 4 Id. INC., 13-15 (Dec. 2013] SUBSTANCE VS. FORM 185 "closing down a derivatives business is easier said than done," and "[l]ike Hell" the derivatives business is "easy to enter and almost impossible to exit."5 Buffet's admonitions may have been prescient of a larger danger in the financial markets that erupted in full force in 2008. Around the same time the report was published, the total notional amount outstanding at the end of 2002 on all surveyed credit default swaps contracts (hereinafter "CDSs"),6 a particular form of derivatives, stood at approximately $2.2 trillion.7 At the end of 2007, that same figure 8 jumped to approximately $62.2 trillion. While the notional outstanding amount of all CDSs eased to around $25.9 trillion by the end of 2011, the use and pervasiveness of CDSs has been by no means insignificant.9 The derivatives market was almost entirely unregulated prior to 2010. Derivatives were sold, traded, and settled over-the-counter (hereinafter "OTC") as privately negotiated agreements outside the purview of regulators. No federal law or regulation required that they be cleared through a centralized counterparty or exchange traded on a particular Id. at 13. A CDS "is an agreement by one party to make a series of payments to a counter party, in exchange for a payoff, if a specified credit instrument goes into default." 13A COMMODITIES REG. § 27:19. 7 ISDA Market Survey; Notional amounts outstanding at year-end, all surveyed contracts, 1987-present,INTERNATIONAL SWAPS AND DERIVATIVEs ASSOCIATION (2010), http://www.isda .org/statistics/pdf/isda-market-survey-annual-data.pdf (last visited Oct. 19, 2012) (hereinafter ISDA Market Survey). Notional amount in the context of CDSs "refers to the par amount of credit protection bought or sold, equivalent to debt or bond amounts, and is used to derive the premium payment calculations for each payment period and the recovery amounts in the event of a default." UnderstandingNotional Amount, ISDA CDS MARKETPLACEsm , http://www.isdacdsmarketplace.com/market-overview/understanding-notional-amount (last visited Dec. 16, 2013). As the International Swaps and Derivatives Association (hereinafter "ISDA") explains, this figure is frequently used as a measure of the size of credit default swap market because notional amount is relatively easy to identify and gather and is consistent over time. However, the ISDA cautions against interpreting it as a measure of either new credit derivative activity (since notional amount represents a "cumulative total of past transactions") or as some measure of risk (since cash flow obligations amounts and mark-to-market exposures are both normally a small percentage of notional amount, and "netting of obligations under a master agreement and collateralization of exposures reduces credit exposures to less than one percent of notional amount"). Id. See also JOHN KIFF ET AL., Credit Derivatives: Systemic Risks and Policy Options?, INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND 4 (Nov. 2009), http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/wp/ 2009/wp09254.pdf (positing that actual credit risk lies somewhere between the net and gross outstanding notional numbers). 8 ISDA Market Survey, supra note 7. 9 UnderstandingNotionalAmount, supra note 7. 5 6 186 CARDOZO PUB. LAW POLICY & ETHICSJ. [Vol. 12:183 platform." Many scholars posit that the lack of oversight in a looming CDS market had allowed some market participants to become heavily entrenched in it." For example, when the federal government committed nearly $182.3 billion in the form of capital infusions and preferred equity investments in insurerl 2 American International Group (hereinafter "AIG") in 2008,1 AIG Financial Products, one of AIG's non-insurance subsidiaries (hereinafter "AIGFP"), had sold over $440 billion in CDS policies.' 4 AIGFP was unable to honor its payment obligations to 10 Clearinghouses "play a crucial role in markets from equities to derivatives, stepping in between two parties in a trade to guarantee payment if either side reneges" by "requir[ing] their members - banks and brokers - to be well-capitalized, to deposit collateral, and to pay into a default fund" to protect against the risk of default. Hester Plumridge, What Ifa ClearingHouse Failed?,WAu. ST. J., Dec. 2, 2011, http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB1000142405297020 4397704577074023939710652. Exchanges also play an important role by creating marketplaces in which financial instruments are traded, ensuring "fair and orderly trading, as well as efficient dissemination of price information for any securities trading on that exchange." Exchange, INVESTOPEDIA, http://www.investopedia.com/terms/e/exchange.asp (last visited Dec. 16, 2013). While clearinghouses and exchanges are similar in that they both essentially stand between market participants, and while most of the large exchanges in the U.S. own their own clearinghouses, it is important to keep in mind the functional difference between the two especially as it relates to systemic risk: clearinghouses mitigate systemic risk by mitigating losses suffered by one counterparty to a derivatives contract as a result of the other counterparty's default, while exchanges provide a formal platform for such transactions to take place and provide potential buyers with pre-trade price transparency. See Exchanges vs. Clearinghouses,EcoNOMICS OF CONTEMPT (April 14, 2010, 4:36 PM), http://economicsofcontempt.blogspot.com/ 2010/04/exchanges-vs-clearinghouses-this-is.html (arguing that virtually all of the systemic risk mitigation in derivatives reform - reduced counterparty risk, the huge increase in transparency, the reduced complexity, regulatory access to the necessary data, etc. - comes from the clearing requirement" and not the "exchange-trading requirement"). "1 See, e.g., Regulatory Oversight and Recent Initiatives to Address Risk Posed by CreditDefault Swaps, U.S. Gov't Accountability Off 14 (Mar. 5, 2009), http://www.gao.gov/new.items/ d09397t.pdf (discussing the concentration risk, which "refers to the potential for loss when a financial institution establishes a large net exposure in similar types of CDS," that inheres in an OTC derivatives market). 12 An insurer is a company that "agrees, by contract, to assume the risk of another's loss and to compensate for that loss." Insurer, BLACK's LAw DICTIONARY (9th ed. 2009). 13 Zachary Tracer, AIG Bailout Ends Four Years After Two-Year Plan: Timeline, BLOOMBERG (Dec. 11, 2012), http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-12-11/aig-bailout-ends-four-years-after-two-year-plan-timeline.htmi. Colloquially known as the "bailout," the federal government implemented the "Troubled Asset Relief Program" in the wake of the financial crisis to stabilize the U.S. economy. See Investment in American InternationalGroup (AIG), U.S. DEP'T OF THE TREASURY, http://www.treasury.gov/initiatives/financial-stability/TARP-Programs/aig/Pages/default.aspx (last visited Nov. 13, 2013) ("AIG's failure would have been devastating to global financial markets and the stability of the broader economy. Therefore, the Federal Reserve and Treasury acted to prevent AIG's disorderly failure."). 14 Xinzi, Zhou, AIG, Credit Default Swaps and the FinancialCrisis, RISK MGMT. Soc'v 4 (May 18, 2013), http://clubs.ntu.edu.sg/rms/researchreports/AIG.pdf. 2013] SUBSTANCE VS. FORM 187 buyers because it failed to anticipate the high rate of defaults of the reference entities tied to such policies." AIG's failure to ascertain AIGFP's true exposure to credit risk from the large concentration of CDSs it had underwritten, 16 and the convoluted, interconnected nature of financial institutions and the derivatives market as a whole,' 7 created systemic risk that threatened the integrity of the broader economy. In July 2010, President Barack Obama signed into federal law the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (hereinafter "Dodd-Frank"), legislation spanning over 13,789 pages" and imposing some of the most significant changes to financial regulation in the United States since the regulatory response following the Great Depression.' 9 In particular, Title VII of Dodd-Frank, known as the Wall Street Transparency and Accountability Act of 2010, mandates regulation of the swaps markets by bestowing jurisdictional responsibilities and rulemaking powers to the Commodities and Futures Trading Commission (hereinafter "CFTC") and the Securities and Exchange Commission (hereinafter "SEC"). By seeking to bring transparency in the hopes of preventing serious systemic risk, Dodd-Frank marks a departure from the unregulated world of in the shadows OTC trading. Part I of this Note provides an overview of derivatives: what they are, why they are used, and normative and utilitarian considerations (i.e., the should questions). In particular, it looks at CDSs, since they have been at the forefront of scrutiny and are perceived to pose of all derivative instruments the greatest threat to systemic risk. It points out that, despite the negative discourse, they serve useful and beneficial purposes in a modern and efficiently functioning economy. Part II posits a framework for understanding systemic risk and describes how systemic '5 Id 16 See Neal S. Wolin, Remarks at the InternationalSwaps and Derivatives Association 25th Annual Meeting (Apr. 22, 2010), available at http://www.treasury.gov/press-center/press-releases/Pages/tg656.aspx ("Because derivatives like credit default swaps . . . were traded on a bilateral basis, few understood the magnitude of aggregate derivatives exposures in the system. Risks embedded in AIG's $400 billion exposure to CDS, which brought that global institution to its knees and threatened to bring the financial system down with it, went unseen by the market and by regulators alike."). 17 See infra Part II. 18 This figure includes all rulemaking provisions as ofJuly 22, 2013. The statutory text of Dodd-Frank is 848 pages. See Joe Mont, Three Years In, Dodd-FrankDeadlinesMissed As Page Count Rises, COMPLIANCE WEEK (Jul. 22, 2013), http://www.complianceweek.com/three-yearsin-dodd-frank-deadlines-missed-as-page-count-rises/article/303986/. 19 See DODD-FRANK WALL STREET REFORM AND CONSUMER PROTECTION Acr, Pub.L. No. 111-203, H.R. 4173 (2010) (hereinafter DODD-FRANK). 188 CARDOZO PUB. LAW POLICY &'rETHICS. V 12:183 [Vol. risk manifested itself in the financial crisis of 2008. Part III looks at how Title VII of Dodd-Frank changes (and creates) the regulatory framework for derivative transactions, with a particular exposition of a seemingly narrow exception it carves out for end-users. Part IV then addresses this exception and argues that some aspects of its current formulation is misguided against the backdrop of Dodd-Frank's overall goal of preventing systemic risk. By predicating eligibility on the type of entity involved, the exception's current formulation may be exceedingly overinclusive by allowing major albeit "non-financial" end-users to avail themselves of the exception without accounting for their derivative transactions' potential contributions to systemic risk. Furthermore, it points out that even if financial end-users ipso facto generate more systemic risk than non-financial end-users because of the "financial" nature of their businesses, the logic of the exception is internally inconsistent, as the exception carves out exemptions for institutions that are indeed "financial" in the nature of the services they provide (and therefore would be categorically disqualified from invoking the exception but for such exemptions). I. A. DERIVATIVES Overview of Derivatives and CDSs At the end of June 2012, the total notional outstanding amount of OTC derivatives reached $639 trillion. 2 0 Of this amount, interest-rate swaps represented the largest risk category, compromising approximately 77% of the entire derivatives market, followed by foreign exchange derivatives (hereinafter "FX") at 10.5%, equity-linked and commodity derivatives at 1.0%, and CDSs at 4%.21 Using the Bank of International Settlement's (hereinafter "BIS") working definitions, of the total outstanding derivatives contracts at this time, financial entities constituted approximately 85% of all counterparties, and non-financial entities approximately 8-10%.22 A survey of the world's 500 largest companies 20 Statistical release: OTC derivatives statistics at end-June 2012, BANK FOR INT'L SETTLEMENTS 1 (2012), http://www.bis.org/publ/otc-hyl2l1.pdf. 21 Id. at 2. Percentages here do not add up to 100% because the statistics provide for an- other market risk category called "Other." See id. at 1. 22 The BIS does not specifically use the term financial entities. It uses three categories of participants: "reporting dealers," "other financial institutions," and "non-financial customers." The first two categories roughly correspond to the concept of a financial entity in Dodd-Frank, and the latter category to that of a non-financial entity. See Id. at 2. Moreover, these percentages were calculated by summing the attributable shares of "reporting dealers," "other financial 2013] SUBSTANCE VS. FORM 189 across eight sectors found that in 2009 approximately 94% of them used derivatives to help manage their commercial risks. 2 3 Of these companies, approximately 98% within the financial sector reported using derivatives.2 4 Companies of other sectors reported that they were using derivatives, on average, only 5.4% less than financial sector companies. 2 5 Clearly, the usage of derivatives by both non-financial and financial companies has been by no means trivial. Derivatives were largely absent from public discourse prior to the economic collapse. 2 6 However, CDSs, one type of derivatives, have been well known in the world of finance since the mid-1990s. Investment bank J.P. Morgan & Co. is credited with structuring the first CDS market, 27 "an idea that changed the entire nature of modern banking, with consequences that are currently rocking the planet." 2 8 A CDS is best understood when one first considers the broader category of financial products to which it belongs, derivatives, as well as another category to which it belongs that is a subset of derivatives, known as credit derivatives. A derivative is a financial instrument that derives its value from something else, which is usually an underlying institutions," and "non-financial customers" for outstanding derivatives contracts in each FX, interest rate, equity-linked, commodities, and credit-default swaps. "Reporting dealers" and "other financial institutions" were combined as a proxy for "financial entity" as used in the enduser exception. Both percentages here do not add up to 100% because the statistics do not provide the aforementioned breakdowns by counterparty in the case of commodity derivatives. See Detailed tables on semiannual OTC derivatives statistics at end-June 2012, BANK FOR INT'L SETTLEMENTS (2012), http://www.bis.org/statistics/derdetailed.htm. 23 Over 94% of the World's Largest Companies Use Derivatives to Help Manage Their Risks, According to ISDA Survey, INT'L SWAPS AND DERIVATIVES Ass'N (April 23, 2009), http:// www2.isda.org/attachment/MTY2MQ==/pressO42309der.pdf. 24 Id Id See Janet Morrissey, Credit Default Swaps: The Next Crisis?, TIME MAGAZINE (Mar. 17, ("Not familiar 2008), http://www.time.com/time/business/article/0,8599,1723152,00.html with credit default swaps? Well, we didn't know much about collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) either - until they began to undermine the economy. Credit default swaps, once an obscure financial instrument for banks and bondholders, could soon become the eye of the credit hurricane. Fun, huh?"). 27 Matthew Philips, The Monster That Ate Wall Street: How 'creditdefault swaps'-an insurance against bad loans-turnedfrom a smart bet into a killer, NEWSWEEK MAGAZINE, Sept. 26, 2008, http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/2008/09/26/the-monster-that-ate-wall-street .html. 28 John Lanchester, Outsmarted:Highfinance vs. human nature, THE NEW YORKER, June 1, 2009, http://www.newyorker.com/arts/critics/books/2009/06/01/090601crbo-bookslanches ter. 25 26 190 CARDOZO PUB. LAW POLICY & ETHICSJ. V 12:183 [Vol. asset or benchmark rate.2 9 What a derivative means in the day-to-day world of finance is that it is a legal agreement between two parties that specifies payment from at least one of the parties to the other3 0 when certain predetermined conditions are satisfied.3 1 Such predetermined conditions could be the occurrence of a date, a resulting value of an underlying asset or an outstanding notional amount of the contract itself, or a default of an issuer on its debt. Derivatives are primarily used for three reasons: (i) hedging, which is the practice through which a market participant mitigates its risk in a particular underlying asset; 3 2 (ii) speculation, through which a market participant acquires the risk in the underlying asset by betting on the direction of that underlying asset 3 3 and hoping that that bet realizes a profit;34 and (iii) for arbitrage, which is when a market participant takes advantage of a going price of an asset in the market that is currently below the price of that same asset specified in contracts to sell the asset at a future date.3 1 The classic example of a basic and longstanding derivative is a jutures contract, demonstrated by the following hypothetical. Suppose at the present moment ("tj"), A, a farmer, is concerned that the price of wheat will decrease at some point in the future. Similarly, B, a miller, is afraid that the availability of wheat in the marketplace will decrease. Obviously, A must sell her wheat to a buyer, such as miller B, after she grows it in order to realize a profit. B must buy his wheat from a seller such as farmer A so that B may mill the wheat, sell the resulting grain, and realize a profit. A and B enter into a futures contract with one another whereby at a specified date ("t 2 ") A agrees to deliver to B a specified amount of wheat, and B agrees to give A a specified amount of cash in return. 3 6 The value of the futures contract is derived from the 29 Typical benchmark rates include but are not limited to interest rates, commodities, U.S. Treasury bonds, stocks, and currencies. See Derivative, BLACK's LAw DICTIONARY (9th ed. 2009). 30 That is, the payment could be either a periodic stream of payments or a one-time lump sum, and both parties could contract to receive payment(s) from each other. 31 Derivative, BLACK's LAw DICTIONARY (9th ed. 2009). 32 Hedge, BLACK's LAw DICrIONARY (9th ed. 2009). 33 For example, will the price of the asset increase or decrease? 34 Speculation, BLACK's LAw DIcTIONARY (9th ed. 2009). 35 Arbitrage, BLACK's LAW DICTIONARY (9th ed. 2009). 36 Basic economic intuition explains why farmer A and miller B would undertake such a transaction: if the price of wheat decreases in the future, then, ceterisparibus, A's profits would be reduced because she would have to sell her wheat at a lower price than at present. Similarly, if the availability of wheat in the marketplace decreases in the future, then, ceteris paribus, B's profits would be reduced through reduced output (e.g., the reduced grain he sells) resulting from 20131 SUBSTANCE VS. FORM 191 predetermined price and quantity of wheat at te, and the specified condition to trigger this exchange is the specified future date of t2 .7'] Because futures contracts must be cleared and exchanged-traded, 38 A and B are reassured that their agreed upon exchange will take place if at or prior to t 2 an event occurs that could otherwise prevent it.39 A clearinghouse will require that both A and B post an initial amount of cash, or margin, so that if A reneges on her end of the bargain by selling her wheat on the open market before t 2, the clearinghouse applies that margin to B's loss. An exchange (which may or may not also own the purchasing a quantity of wheat lower than the most efficient quantity that his business can process. Thus, A and B have hedged their exposure to future risks: A has hedged against a decrease in the price of wheat at t2 by locking-in a price at ti, and B has hedged against a decrease in the availability of wheat at t2 by locking-in a specified quantity at ti. Nonetheless, in some respects, both A and B have also assumed market risk if A and B's respective expectations about the wheat market at t2 are both incorrect (i.e., the price of wheat on the open market actually increases and the supply of wheat is markedly abundant). The market risk here to A would be the foregone gross profit as a result of selling wheat at a price lower than its fair market value, and the market risk to B would be the higher cost it would need to pay for wheat per the contract than the fair market value. See, e.g., Market Risk, INVESTOPEDIA, http://www.investopedia.com/terms/m/marketrisk.asp (last visited Dec. 16, 2013). 37 Every futures contract involves two positions: the party agreeing to buy the underlying asset in the future, or the buyer, assumes a "long" position in the contract, and the party agreeing to sell the asset in the future, or the seller, assumes a "short" position. This terminology reflects the expectations of the parties regarding the marketplace at t2 when entering into the futures contract at t,. In this case, A hopes or expects that the price of wheat will decrease ("short") in near future; otherwise, locking in a price at t would be undoubtedly economically irrational. The best way of understanding B's "long" position here is focusing on the specified price of wheat that A agrees to charge B at t 2 for the specified quantity of wheat to be delivered. While the hypothetical is framed in terms of B's concern over the availability of wheat at t 2 and not the price of wheat per se, the availability of wheat in the marketplace (or lack thereof), would, ceterisparibus,invariably affect the price of wheat in the marketplace. Particularly, if the quantity supplied of wheat in the marketplace at t2 significantly decreases, the market price of wheat would increase. Thus, it could be said that B is also expecting that the price of wheat at t 2 will increase ("long"), and thus locking in a specified price now (along with a specified quantity). See Ream Heakal, Futures Fundamentals:How The Market Works, http://www.investopedia.com/ university/futures/futures2.asp (last visited Oct. 21, 2012). 38 See 7 U.S.C. § 6(a) (2010) (Commodity Exchange Act § 4(a)). 39 In particular, A and B might worry about the possibility of the weather destroying the wheat grains, or one of them defaulting on or reneging on its end of the bargain. An economic actor in this situation may renege if favorable market conditions present themselves at some point after t, and on or before t2 - conditions that at least one of the parties may have failed to account for prior to undertaking the futures contract. For example, if the specified price of wheat that A is to sell B at t2 is $5/barrel, and at some point at or directly before t2 the fair market value of wheat spikes to $10/barrel, A may be induced to breach the contract by selling the wheat at fair market value since that would increase his gross profit two-fold. 192 CARDOZO PUB. LAW POLICY & ETHICS J. [Vol. 12:183 clearinghouse"o) also provides B a platform on which to find another trading partner and protect itself against default. A and B may also enter into a swaps agreement to address other concerns. For example, A and B might be dissatisfied with their respective revenue streams - but it just so happens that A feels more uncertain about his revenue for the year than does B, and B thinks that A's projected revenue stream is still more favorable in absolute terms than B's. By swapping their respective revenue streams with one another, A and B now receive revenue streams that each feels is more preferable than prior to entering into the swaps agreement and without having to change legal ownership.4 ' In essence, the swaps agreement has allowed A and B to efficiently allocate their respective preferences and risk appetites, resulting in what is seemingly a "win-win" situation.4 2 With the increasingly central role of credit in the economy, 3 businesses may also be concerned with credit risk. Credit risk is the "risk due to uncertainty in a counterparty's . . . ability to meet its financial obligations."4 By applying the same concepts of financial risk management that underlie instruments such as futures and swaps, financial ingenuity spawned the invention of the CDS to mitigate and hedge credit 40 41 See supra, note 10 (discussing the roles of clearinghouses and exchanges). See, e.g., Kevin Dolan & Carolyn DuPuy, Equity Derivatives: Principlesand Practice, 15 VA TAx REV. 161, 164 (1995). In addition to mitigating or more efficiently allocating real or perceived risk as the entity's motivating factor, it is important to consider the tax implications of entering into a revenue swap transaction as opposed to some other form of risk mitigation/ allocation. See [ 10.03 SWAP TRANSACTIONS, 1999 WL 629829, 1. 42 Of course, this simplistic example does not account for externalities, which are the "spillover" costs or consequences of one's economic activity that cause a third-party not privy to the transaction to benefit without paying or to suffer without compensation. Externality, BiACK'S LAW DICTIONARY (9th ed. 2009). A transaction that results in negative externalities is arguably not a win-win situation; it might be for the parties directly privy to the transaction, but not for society at large. Moreover, economic theory recognizes that not all transactions in which parties are free to allocate risks necessarily result in an optimal allocation thereof; some markets are prone to asymmetries whereby some parties have better access to or simply more information directly informing the transaction. See, e.g., Joseph E. Stiglitz, Asymmetries ofInformation and Economic Policy, PROJECT SYNDICATE (Dec. 4, 2001), availableat http://www.project-syndicate .org/commentary/asymmetries-of-information-and-economic-policy. 43 See Report to the Congress on Practices of the Consumer Credit Industry in Soliciting and Extending Credit and theirEffects on Consumer Debt and Insolvency, BD. OF GOVERNORS OF THE FED. RESERVE Sys. (June 2006), available at http://www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/rptcongress/bankruptcy/bankruptcybillstudy2006O6.pdf (discussing the history of consumer credit in America and its increasing demand since the 1920s). 44 Glyn A. Holton, Credit Risk, RISK ENCYCLOPEDIA, available at http://riskencyclopedia .com/articles/credit risk/ (last visited Dec. 16, 2013). 2013] SUBSTANCE VS. FORM 193 risk. It may be easier to understand the ways in which credit risk presents itself in the context of modern-day banking. Say Bank C is concerned about a loan of $2 million it has underwritten to a commercial Client X, whose recent activities have exposed it to legal liabilities so large that they materially threaten its ability to honor its obligations to Bank C and other creditors. 5 Under standard regulatory requirements, Bank C needs to reserve a certain amount of cash in proportion to the 45 This hypothetical largely patterns the first CDS transaction in 1994 between J.P. Morgan and the European Bank of Reconstruction and Development. In 1989, an oil tanker belonging to (what is now known as) Exxon Mobile Corp. spilled hundreds of thousands of barrels of crude oil in Alaska, an unprecedented environmental disaster that made Exxon the target of numerous liabilities. Nonetheless, it approached J.P. Morgan and asked the bank for a multibillion dollar line of credit to cover potential damages of five billion dollars resulting from the oil spill. Because Exxon had been a long-standing client of J.P. Morgan, the bank was reluctant to turn the corporation away and risk damaging a relationship with its client. Under regulatory requirements ("Basel Rules") lenders such as J.P. Morgan needed to reserve a certain portion of cash to cover the risk of Exxon defaulting on the loan - reserve requirements that, in turn, limited the amount of lending J.P. Morgan could do, the amount of risk it could take on, and thus the amount of profit it could make. Where J.P. Morgan parted with convention in the finance world at the time was by thinking of how to sell the risk of the loan instead of selling the loan itself. While an outright sale of the loan would have obviously removed the risk of Exxon's default entirely, J.P. Morgan may have thought that such a sale would be an inappropriate decision for numerous reasons, namely transactional costs (e.g., time and expense in finding a buyer), legal requirements (e.g., obtaining consent of the borrower, Exxon), reputational costs (e.g., Exxon viewing the sale of loan, ascertained by news in the market or media, as J.P. Morgan's distrust of or doubts in Exxon's ability to make good on its financial obligations, thereby damaging the lender-client relationship), and/or simple pecuniary gain (i.e., why share or sell potential profit if you don't have to?). By selling the credit risk to the European Bank, J.P. Morgan's hands were, in effect, washed clean if Exxon did default; in return, the European bank received premium payments from J.P. Morgan to insure against this possibility. In the end, each party got ahead - or at least, thought they did - based on the information available to them and on their individualized assessments of market conditions and their respective businesses: Exxon got its credit line, the European Bank received regular cash premium payments, and J.P. Morgan was able to not only honor its relationship with a long-standing client but also free up capital that it could now reallocate to other more useful and profit-generating activities. John Lanchester, Outsmarted: High finance vs. human nature, THE NEW YORKER (June 1, 2009), see http://www.newyorker.com/arts/critics/books/2009/06/01/090601crbobookslanchester; Transcript of Money, Power & Wall Street: Part One, PBS, http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/ frontline/business-economy-financial-crisis/money-power-wall-street/transcript-19 (last visited Dec. 16, 2013) (narrative from B. Masters, member of J.P. Morgan's swaps team that executed the 1994 deal, explaining what J.P. Morgan sought to accomplish through a credit derivative swap); see also The Financial Crisis, the FRONTLINE Interviews: Credit Default Swaps, PBS, http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/oral-history/financial-crisis/tags/credit-default-swaps (last visited Dec. 16, 2013) (narrative from T. Duhon, J.P. Morgan banker responsible for building up the bank's credit derivative trading book after the 1994 deal, explaining the bank's considerations in executing the credit derivative transaction). 194 CARDOZO PUB. LAW POLICY & ETHICS J. [Vol. 12:183 loan in case Client X defaults. 6 Nonetheless, Bank C may feel like being extra precautious if it feels that the amount of reserved capital would not adequately compensate it in case of default by Client X.4 7 Bank C enters into a CDS agreement with Insurance Company D," who believes that Client X's risk of defaulting is relatively small. Bank C and Insurance Company D negotiate the specific terms4 ' of the CDS agreement, including the ambit of events that are to be deemed a "de5 fault."> > Bank C agrees to pay $100,000 in quarterly installments51 to The basic model of a fractional-reserve banking system assumes that depositing-taking banks accept depositor money and loan out a significant majority of that money, generating revenue for itself in the excess of the amount of interest it charges on its loans over the amount of interest it gives its depositors. Basel III regulations have imposed target capital requirements on banks to be anywhere from eight to twelve percent. See Lev Ratnovski, How much capital should banks have?, VOX (July 28, 2013), available at http://www.voxeu.org/article/how-muchcapital-should-banks-have. 47 Looking at this hypothetical from a post-hoc perspective, if Bank C has entered into the CDS agreement with Insurance Company D at to (as described in the immediately following sentence), and if Client X defaults on its obligations shortly thereafter, then Bank C has made a very prudent risk management decision: it is receiving from Insurance Company D the full face value of $2 million, which is greater than the amount of capital it has reserved (which is a small percentage of the loan's face value). 48 It should be noted that the entities in this hypothetical were chosen for the sake of clarity. It may be tempting to think that CDSs are insurance policies, or that only insurance companies are sellers of CDS protection (they are not). While CDSs arguably resemble insurance policies in many regards, and while the sellers of CDS protection may be easily analogized to underwriters of insurance policies, important differences exist between CDSs and insurance policies. CDSs are not regulated under insurance law in any U.S. jurisdiction, and Dodd-Frank expressly preempts regulation of swaps or security-based swaps under state insurance laws. Nonetheless, considerable debate abounds as to the logical coherence of treating CDSs differently from insurance policies; those who support regulating CDSs under the auspices of insurance law argue CDSs serve substantively the same economic purposes as does insurance. 49 As discussed in infra note 50, the ISDA Master Agreement is used by almost all parties involved in a real-life derivatives transaction and would likely serve as the framework for defining key terms of the agreement and obligations of the parties. 50 "Default" in the context of CDSs generally encompasses a number of specified credit events, one of which is the actual default of a reference entity. The International Swaps and Derivatives Association (hereinafter "ISDA") has crafted a standard form contract called a Master Agreement (hereinafter "ISDA Master Agreement") and its use is near ubiquitous among participants in the global OTC derivatives market (which includes CDSs). Charles R. Mills, 2nd Circuit: Credit Default Swap Terms Must Be Strictly Construed 27 No. 4 FTrruREs & DERIVATIVEs L. REP. 1. The ISDA Master Agreement, most recently updated in 2002, serves as the central document in the framework of derivatives transactions and defines "the legal and credit relationship between the counterparties, including representations and warranties, events of default and termination, covenants and choice of law." Id. (internal citations removed). "Confirmations" documents supplement the ISDA Master Agreement and allow the parties to define the "precise risk that [they] wish to transfer, by setting forth the economic terms and transaction-specific modifications to the ISDA Master Agreement . . . [and] define, among other 46 2013] SUBSTANCE VS. FORM 195 Insurance Company D over five years 52 in return for Insurance Company D paying Bank C if Client X defaults. Thus, if the CDS is executed at to, and, if after maturity of five years and the twentieth and final quarterly payment at t2 0 no event of default occurs, the CDS terminates and Insurance Company D makes no payment to Bank C. If, however, Client X defaults after Bank C's fifth quarterly payment at t5 , Insurance Company D must pay Bank C the incurred loss, which they had agreed at to to be the full notional amount of Client X's $2 million liability. In return, Bank C must deliver to Insurance Company D the debt obligation of Client X, which has a face value of $2 million but a smaller fair market value at t5.1 things, the specific terms of the Credit Event." Id. (internal citations and quotations removed). Typical credit events stipulated in the agreement usually include the reference entity's bankruptcy, obligation acceleration ("when the obligation becomes due and payable before its normal expiration date"), obligation default (a "technical default, such as violation of a bond covenant"), failure to pay due payments, repudiation/moratorium ("compensation after specified actions of a government," or delay in payment), or restructuring ("reduction and renegotiation of delinquent debts in order to improve or restore liquidity."). Christian Weistroffer, Credit default swaps: Heading towards a more stable system, DEUTSCHE BANK RESEARCH, http://www.dbresearch.com/ PROD/DBRINTERNETEN-PROD/PROD0000000000252032.pdf (last visited December 21, 2009). While the typical counterparties to CDS transactions have sophisticated counsel to ensure that the "default" event encompasses a wide range of circumstances, CDS agreements have nonetheless "been the subject of several lawsuits, for example, concerning whether an event of default has occurred," and "are likely to give rise to additional litigation because of the recent financial crisis. See John D. Finnerty & Kishlaya Pathak, A Review of Recent Derivatives Litigation, 16 FoRDHAM J. CORP. & FIN. L. 73, 89 (2011). 51 CDSs are generally structured so that the buyer of the policy pays the seller quarterly premium payments in arrears. See MARK ANSON ET AL., CREDIT DERIVATIVES: INSTRUMENTS, APPuCATIONS, AND PRICING, 49 (2004). 52 Also known as the "maturity." Five years is the most common maturity for CDSs. ANUNDERSTANDING CREDIT DERIVATIVES AND RELATED INSTRUMENTS, 70 (2005). 53 This process is known as "settlement" and is usually agreed upon up-front. It takes two forms: physical settlement and cash settlement. The example here assumes physical settlement, whereby "the protection buyer has to deliver the underlying bond in exchange for compensation." Christian Weistroffer, Credit default swaps: Heading towards a more stable system, TJLIO BOMFIM, DEUTSCHE BANK RESEARCH (last visited December 21, 2009), http://www.dbresearch.com/ Cash settlement, PROD/DBRINTERNETEN-PROD/PROD0000000000252032.pdf. which does not require delivery of the instrument, would occur if the "protection buyer receives the difference between the bond value at the time of settlement and the bond's nominal value in cash." Id. In this example, cash settlement would mean that instead of Insurance Company D paying the full notional amount of $2 billion in exchange for Bank C's delivery of the obligation, it instead pays the difference between that $2 billion and the value of Client X's loan obligation at the time of settlement. Physical settlement was the most commonly used form until 2005, constituting 73% of both settlement types by the end of that year. Id. However, cash settlement has become more widely used due to the incorporation of auction settlement 196 CARDOZO PUB. LAW POLICY 6r ETHICS J [Vol. 12:183 In effect, the CDS has allowed Bank C to swap the risk of default on Client X's credit obligation for a potential payout by Insurance Company D in case Client X defaults. It is a derivative instrument because its value derives from a specified credit event (the default of the reference entity, Client X) and a swap 4 because the CDS buyer swaps the risk of default for compensation to the seller. Similar to the futures contract between Farmer A and Miller B, the CDS agreement between Bank C and Insurance Company D has allowed each of them to allocate their risks more efficiently.5 5 Thus, of the three broad reasons as to why derivative instruments are used, this example demonstrates that credit derivatives can be a highly effective tool in hedging credit risk. In addition, by shifting the risk to Insurance Company D, Bank C may keep less capital in reserve to protect against Client X's default, allowing it to allocate more capital to the business of making more loans or investing in some other profitgenerating venture. Either way, Bank C has increased liquidity 6 in the procedures in credit default swap agreements, and due to issuance of "naked swap" agreements especially in the height of the financial crisis that resulted in an amount of underwritten protection that exceeded the deliverable underlying assets, thereby making physical settlement impossible for at least some CDS buyers. See id.; see also Virginie Coudert & Mathieu Gex, The Credit Default Swap Market and the Settlement of Large Defaults, CENTRE D'ETUDES PROSPECTIVES ET D'INFORMATIONS INTERNATIONALES, Working Paper No. 2010-17, http://www.economiein- ternationale.eu/anglaisgraph/workpap/pdf/2010/wp2010-17.pdf (which discusses the concerns raised about the market's ability to settle major entities' defaults given the enormous positions assumed by CDS buyers in CDSs referencing those entities). 54 It could be argued that the term "credit default swap" is a bit of a misnomer because out of the family of derivative products, CDSs more practically resemble options rather than swaps. See Rahul Bhattacharya, A CreditDefault Swap (CDS) is a proxy for a Put Option on the Assets ofa Firm, RIsKLATTE (Oct. 5, 2008), available at http://www.risklatte.com/Articles/QuantitativeFin ance/QF100.php. 55 If Client X never defaults on its obligation, Bank C recovers its $2 million from Client X at t2 0 , upon maturity. While the aggregate of the premiums to Insurance Company D are nonrecoverable and would thus result in reduced net return on investment, Insurance Company D has nonetheless reduced its risk of loss on the loan. If Client X defaults on its debt just over a year at t5 , then Bank C stops paying the quarterly premiums and Insurance Company C ensures that the obligation of $2 million is refunded. Even though Bank C still cannot recover the premiums paid up to and including t 5 , it would have lost the entire $2 million without the credit default swap contract in place. Obviously, these examples make a number of assumptions, namely the solvency of the CDS seller and its ability to honor its obligations to the CDS buyer in case of the referenced entity's default. In the case of the financial crisis, this particular assumption proved highly problematic and simply untrue for many dealers of CDS. 56 Liquidity is a financial instrument's "quality or state of being readily convertible to cash." Liquidity, BLACK'S LAW DIcnoNARY (9th ed. 2009). SUBSTANCE VS. FORM 2013] 197 market, which ultimately benefits Main Street57 because businesses will have access to more capital and at a cheaper cost. B. 'Naked Swaps, " Speculation, and Social Utility The example of the CDS agreement above assumes that Bank C owns the underlying asset that it seeks to protect against default. But, as it became especially evident after the financial crisis, CDS buyers need neither own the underlying asset nor have any material exposure to a particular risk associated with it." Instead, buyers have been able to use CDSs to speculate or make bets on the outcome of risks associated with the asset. For example, if Market Participant S believes that the mounting liabilities faced by Client X's business might soon push Client X into default, S may speculate on Client X's default by doing exactly what Bank C did: enter into a CDS agreement with Insurance Company D. Market Participant S agrees to pay Insurance Company D quarterly premiums in return for a payout by Insurance Company D in the event Client X defaults.5 Market Participant S hopes that Client X 57 "A colloquial term used to refer to individual investors, employees and the overall economy. 'Main Street' is typically contrasted with 'Wall Street.' The latter refers to the financial markets, major financial institutions and big corporations, as well as the high-level employees, managers and executives of those firms. . . . Main Street can also describe a small, independent investment company (i.e., a Main Street firm) as opposed to one of the large, globally recognized Wall Street investment firms. Wall Street firms tend to serve large investors with multi-million dollar assets, like institutions, while Main Street firms tend to be better suited to serving small, individual investors by providing more personalized service." Main Street, INVESTOPEDIA, http:/ /www.investopedia.com/terms/m/mainstreet.asp (last accessed Nov. 18, 2013). 58 In the world of insurance, this concept is known as "insurable interest." An insurable interest "is necessary to the validity of an insurance contract, whatever the subject matter of the policy, whether upon property or life." 44 Am. JUR. 2D INSURANCE § 927. While each state has its own statute that defines the exact parameters of the "insurable interest" requirement, see, e.g Kelly J. Bozanic, An Investment to Die jbr: From Life Insurance to Death Bonds, the Evolution and Legality of the Life Settlement Industry, 113 PENN ST L REV 229, 266 (2008) (fn. 146 which lists each state's statute defining "insurable interest"), a person is generally said to have an insurable interest "if it may fairly be said that that person has a reasonable expectation of deriving pecuniary advantage from the preservation of the subject-matter of insurance, whether that advantage inures to him personally or as the representative of the rights or interests of another." 44 AM. JUR. 2D INSURANCE § 933 (citing Custer v. Homeside Lending, Inc., 858 So. 2d 233 (Ala. 2003)). While CDS policies are not regulated as insurance contracts, many critics argue that they are functionally equivalent and thus should be regulated as such. The issue of insurable interest is further explored in infra note 71 comparing naked CDS policies to viaticle settlement policies. 59 The terms of the agreement here could be nearly the same as that between Bank C and Insurance Company D, with Client X as the reference entity and Client X's default on its 198 CARDOZO PUB. LAW POLICY & ETHICSJ. [Vol. 12:183 defaults on its obligation to Bank C, 6 0 since such a default will trigger a payout that both offsets the premium payments Market Participant S will have already made to Insurance Company D, conferring upon Market Participant S a realized gain. In effect, the CDS agreement between Market Participant S and Insurance Company D is a naked credit default swap. 1 While the lack of transparency in the OTC market has made it difficult to determine precise numbers on their usage, CDS issuance in which the buyer lacked any ownership interest with respect to the reference entity was widespread leading up to the financial crisis.6 2 One estimate puts naked CDSs at around eighty percent of the entire CDS market around mid-2009.6 Some argue that a few substantive changes in the CDS market in the early 2000s fostered a financial environment that encouraged naked CDS issuance and trading. First, many new participants became involved in the CDS market, creating a secondary mar- obligations to Bank C as the triggering event. See supra note 50 (events that may encompass "default"). 60 As discussed in supra note 37, the CDS seller here is said to assume a "long" position in the CDS agreement since it hopes the agreement runs its entire course until maturity, thus collecting the sum of premiums from Market Participant M and not making any payout. By contrast, the CDS buyer here is said to assume a "short" position because it hopes the triggering credit event occurs as soon as possible, since it would realize net gain in the excess of the payout from Insurance Company D less the sum of the premiums paid (and, taking into account the time value of money, a credit event that occurs as closest to the undertaking of the agreement at to means Market Participant M can invest the realized net gain at an earlier time and thus realize higher overall returns). Because the speculator, Market Participant M, does not own any insurable interest in the reference entity, Client X, its position is said to be a synthetic short position. See Testimony Concerning Credit Default Swaps Before the H. Comm. on Agric., 110th Cong. (2008), available at http://www.sec.gov/news/testimony/2008/tsl01508ers.htm. 61 "The targeted swaps are considered 'naked' because the buyer purchases credit insurance without owning the underlying bond." John Carney, How Banning "Naked" Credit Default Swaps Would Crush CreditMarkets, BUSINESS INSIDER (July 24, 2009), available at http://articles.businessinsider.com/2009-07-24/wall-street/30017162-1-credit-default-cds-prices. 62 See, e.g., Yeon-Koo Che & Rajiv Sethiy, Economic Consequences of Speculative Side Bets: The Case of Naked Credit Default Swap, SELECTEDWORus 2 (Aug. 6, 2010), http://works.be press.com/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1028&context=yeonkoo ("The notional value of credit default swap contracts prior to the financial crisis of 2008 was estimated to be about ten times as great as that of the underlying bonds . . . . Even with the netting out of multilateral positions and the possibility that some naked CDS buyers were facing other exposures that were positively correlated with default, there is little doubt that much of this volume was speculative . . . ."). 63 Dawn Kopecki & Shannon Harrington, Banning 'Naked'DefaultSwaps May Raise Corporate Funding Costs, BLOOMBERG, July 24, 2009, available at http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/ news?pid=20601208. 2013] SUBSTANCE VS. FORM 199 ket 64 that made it more difficult for buyers and sellers to ascertain the financial strengths of their counterparties.65 Second, demand for CDSs referencing complex, structured financial instruments66 whose underlying creditworthiness was difficult to evaluate increased. 7 Combined with increasingly rampant speculation in the CDS market, the result at the end of 2007 was a market in which the total notional value of CDSs was $45 trillion, "but the corporate bond, municipal bond, and structured investment vehicles market totaled less than $25 trillion."6' The difference of $20 trillion between these figures is estimated to be the total notional value of "speculative 'bets' on the possibility of a credit event of a specific credit asset not owned by either party to the CDS contract."69 A discussion on speculation and naked CDSs naturally begs the broader question of the social utility served for society at large by such a market. By drawing analogies to insurance law, some critics propose an outright ban on naked CDSs.70 If the law prohibits an individual from "The market for goods or services that have previously been available for buying and selling; esp. the securities market in which previously issued securities are traded among investors." Market, BLACK'S LAw DicroNARY (9th ed. 2009). 65 Richard Zabel, Credit Default Swaps: From Protection To Speculation, RoaINs, KAPLAN, MILLER & CIREsi L.L.P. (September 2008), http://www.rkmc.com/publications/articles/creditdefault-swaps-from-protection-to-speculation. 66 E.g., Asset-based securities (hereinafter "ABS"), mortgage-backed securities (hereinafter "MBS"), collateralized debt obligations (hereinafter "CDOs") and structured investment vehicles (hereinafter "SIVs"). See infra Part II. 67 Zabel, supra note 65. See infra Part II. 64 68 69 Id. Id 70 See, e.g., Wolfgang Minchau, Time to Outlaw Naked Credit Default Swaps, THE FINANCIAL TIMES LTD. (Feb. 28, 2010), available at http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/7b56f5b2-24a311 df-8be0-00144feab49a.html (arguing that "there is not one social or economic benefit" flowing from naked CDSs and analogizes a ban on them to a ban on bank robberies). Whether or not one agrees with Munchau's ultimate proposal, he makes two noteworthy points: (1) that a "universally accepted aspect of insurance regulation is that you can only insure what you actually own" - not use insurance to gamble, but "to reduce incalculable risks" - and regulation of CDSs divergent from insurance policies makes no sense since CDSs function economically as insurance contracts because they "insure the buyer against the default of an underlying security"; (2) the exchange of cash flows inherent in a CDS should not disturb the treatment of a CDS as a belonging to a broader category of insurance policies, and the classification of CDS as a swap vis-A-vis a traditional insurance policy is misleading since the latter "can [also] be viewed as a swap, as it involves an exchange of cash flows" from the insurance policy-buyer to -seller, "but nobody in their right mind would use the swap-like characteristics of an insurance contract as an excuse not to regulate the insurance industry." Id. "[O]nce you strip away the complex technical machinery, you end up with a product that offers insurance-even though it is a lot more versatile than a standard insurance contract." Id. 200 CARDOZO PUB. LAW POLICY 6- ETHICS J [Vol. 12:183 taking out insurance policies on a neighbor's house or on the life of his boss7 1 then neither should the law allow him to accomplish the same ends - betting, essentially - but through different means.72 While this Note does not reach the merits of regulating CDSs as insurance polices,7 3 it points out that naked CDSs and speculation generally serve important market functions that inform their social utility. First, the buying and selling of naked CDS policies provides additional liquidity to investors. In turn, that liquidity enables investors to take non-speculative positions. For example, in order for Market Participant 71 But consider the issue of a viaticle settlement policy, an "investment contract under which an investor acquires an interest in a life insurance policy of a terminally ill person . . . at a discount, depending upon the insured's life expectancy, and when the insured dies, the investor receives the proceeds of that policy." 44 Am. JUR. 2D INSURANCE § 789. Viaticle settlement policies differ from CDSs because of the former's classification as insurance contracts and thus being subject to the insurable interest requirement. See supra note 58. While the requirement is based in common-law and its exact parameters are defined by state law, the Supreme Court has stated that an insurable interest in the context of a life insurance policy exists when the assignee of the policy has a greater interest in the survival of the insured than in the insured's death. See, e.g., Warnock v. Davis, 104 U.S. 775, 779 (1881) (insurable interest exists when there is a "reasonable expectation of advantage or benefit from the continuance of [the insured's] life"); Conn. Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Schaefer, 94 U.S. 457, 460 (1876) ("the essential thing is that the policy shall be obtained in good faith, and not for the purpose of speculating upon the hazard of a life in which the insured has no interest."). Generally, an "individual has an insurable interest in his own life and in the lives of others with whom he has a particular relationship," such as "close familial relationships ... as well as those relationships with demonstrable economic dependencies," including those in a debtor-creditor relationship, and the presence of such an interest is required typically only at the time of the policy's creation - not at a subsequent disposition of the policy or at collection of the death benefit proceeds. Kelly J. Bozanic, An Investment to Die for: From Life Insurance to Death Bonds, the Evolution and Legality of the Life Settlement Industry, 113 PENN ST L REv 229, 251 (2008). Compare Grigsby v. Russell, 222 US 149, 155 (1911) (finding that although an individual lacking insurable interest could not purchase an interest in the life of another, an individual who purchased a policy with proper insurable interest could then assign that interest to an individual who lacked insurable interest) with Kramer v. Phoenix Life Ins. Co., 15 NY3d 539 (2010) (holding that New York law allows an individual to procure an insurance policy on his or her own life and immediately transfer it to an individual that lacks an insurable interest in that life, even when the policy was procured expressly for the purpose of that transfer). Notwithstanding the lack of consumer education on life settlement policies (a possibility that inheres with any investment opportunity), the potential for abuse or fraudulent activity (especially involving procurement from the elderly or terminally ill), or issues of morality (should we allow profit from death?), one author defends the market for life settlement policies because, "when the transactions are legitimate and entered into with full disclosure of the consequences, [they] can be a great way to gain liquidity from an otherwise illiquid asset ... moving assets in a free market to their highest and best use." Kelly J. Bozanic, supra note 71, at 232. As discussed below, defenders of the naked CDS market make similar arguments. 72 See Munchau, supra note 70, in which MUnchau uses these examples to support his argument that CDS policies should be regulated as insurance policies. 73 See supra notes 70 and 71. 2013] SUBSTANCE VS. FORM 201 S to purchase a CDS referencing Client X, someone must be willing to sell such a CDS to him (e.g., Insurance Company D). An active market of speculators in the CDS market thus ensures that those who have a direct ownership interest in the reference entity and who want to hedge their exposure to that entity will have easy access to a seller. Second, distinguishing between activities that are truly speculative and non-speculative is an inherently difficult endeavor. Because of the general nature of financial risks, an entity could purchase a naked CDS policy to hedge its exposure to another entity to which it believes it is exposed, but that exposure may not directly correspond to ownership of an underlying financial asset or security in the other entity. For example, Market Participant S may have an ongoing business relationship with Client X as a supplier of equipment that S uses in its business. Because Market Participant S is concerned with Client X's financial troubles, S may want to hedge its exposure to X's possibility of failure by purchasing a CDS referencing X's obligations to Bank C, even though S has no direct ownership interest in the underlying security (i.e., X's obligations to C). In effect, the CDS referencing Client X's obligations to Bank C may serve as a proxy for Client X's business relationship with Market Participant S.71 Finally, a market for naked CDS policies provides increased transparency to investors in the form of useful "market-based signals."7 Numerous investors buying CDS policies on a reference entity in which none of them own any of the entity's underlying securities could indicate widespread lack of confidence in the entity's stability or financial health. The active trading of naked CDSs may alert investors and regulators to "early indicators of financial stress at particular financial insti- 74 "For example, let's say that someone has an ongoing business relationship, such as a supplier relationship, with a company that is in some financial trouble. In such a situation, the purchaser of a CDS may be hedging against the collectability of trade receivables. On paper, this purchaser would not own the underlying security protected by the CDS, but the CDS may in fact be a legitimate 'proxy' to hedge the exposure of the trade receivables." Ravi Nagarajan, Don't Ban Naked CreditDefault Swaps if the Law Can't be Enforced SEEKING ALPHA (March 29, 2009), http://seekingalpha.com/article/128319-don-t-ban-naked-credit-default-swaps-if-thelaw-can-t-be-enforced. 75 Robert E. Litan, The Derivatives Dealers' Club and Derivatives Markets Reforms: A Guide for Policy Makers, Citizens and Other Interested Parties, BROOKINGS.EDU 25 (April 7, 2010), http://www.brookings.edu/-/media/research/files/papers/2010/4/07%20derivatives%201itan/04 07 derivatives litan. 202 CARDOZO PUB. LAW POLICY& ETHICS J1 [Vol. 12: 183 tutions."' 6 Thus, speculators in the CDS market are "more likely to be early messengers of bad news rather than saboteurs."7 7 Of course, any regulatory regime imposed on the markets (or lack thereof) should ultimately assess its impact and weight its attendant costs against benefits. While this Note takes the position that the benefits of allowing a market in naked CDSs likely outweigh its costs, it recognizes that oversight and regulation are still necessary. As Part II discusses, critics direct particular attention to the systemic risk potentially generated by OTC markets and the products and participants involved therein. II. A. SYSTEMIC RISK Defining Systemic Risk As two scholars contend, "One of the most feared events in banking is the cry of systemic risk. It matches the fear of a cry of 'fire!' in a crowded theater or other gatherings. But unlike fire, the term systemic risk is not clearly defined."78 Given that averting systemic risk is the leitmotif of Dodd-Frank, it is critical that legislators, regulators, and researchers find common ground in defining it. The Financial Stability Oversight Council (hereinafter "FSOC"), created by Title I of Dodd-Frank, has been tasked with identifying potential risks to the stability of the United States' financial system. 9 76 Id. See also Steffan Kern, Short selling: Important business in need ofglobally consistent rules, DEUTSCHE BANK RESEARCH (March 17, 2010), http://www.dbresearch.com/PROD/DBRIN TERNETEN-PROD/PROD0000000000255171.pdf (summarizing the risks and benefits of "short selling" in the CDS market - which encompasses the active trading of naked CDS policies - and arguing that "[g]eneral limitations on short selling will do more harm than good"); Floyd Norris, Naked Truth on Default Swaps, N.Y. TIMEs (May 20, 2010), available at http://www .nytimes.com/2010/05/21/business/economy/21norris.html ("To most on Wall Street, the answer [to whether the buying and selling of naked CDS should be disallowed] is obvious: let markets function. My buying that insurance will probably drive up the price, and serve as a market indication that people are worried about the credit, which is good because it gives a warning to others."). 77 Id. at 27; Litan, supra note 75 at 25. 78 George G. Kaufman & Kenneth E. Scott, What Is Systemic Risk, and Do Bank Regulators Retardor Contribute to It?, 7 THE INDEP. REv. 371 (2003), availableat http://www.independent .Org/pdf/tir/tir_07_3_scott.pdf. 79 Specifically, FSOC is tasked with identifying "systemically important financial institutions" (hereinafter "SIFIs"). While the end-user clearing exception does not contemplate SIFIs or FSOC's duties with regard to SIFIs, they should, to a limited degree. If preventing and mitigating systemic risk is a goal that unites all of Dodd-Frank's specific mechanisms (and exceptions, such as the one for commercial end-users), then, for logical coherence, regulators 2013] SUBSTANCE VS. FORM 203 FSOC observes that, although there is "no one way to define systemic risk, all definitions attempt to capture risks to the stability of the financial system as a whole, as opposed to the risk facing individual financial institutions or market participants.o80 Given that systemic risk by its very nature contemplates a broader macroeconomic picture, a formal measure of systemic risk should thus "capture the linkages and vulnerabilities of the entire financial system - not just those of the banking industry - and with which we can monitor and regulate the overall level of risk to the system and its ties to the real economy. "81 This Note will point out that the interconnectedness of financial firms and their exposures to particularly opaque derivatives such as CDSs are two significant factors that created the financial crisis of 2008. It will then point out that, notwithstanding the interconnectedness of financial firms in particular, any purposeful definition of systemic risk must not neglect the systemic risk potentially propagated by non-financial firms, and should consider their levels of interconnectedness to the broader economy and exposures to risky financial products. i. Systemic Risk and the Financial Crisis of 2008 The systemic risk that characterized the financial crisis of 2008 had its origins in the housing market. Beginning in the late 1990s, house should draw a nexus between SIFIs and the exception. In other words, the criteria for identifying an institution as a SIFI and those for allowing an institution to avail itself of the end-user exception should reflect one another since the underlying rationale for the exception recognizes the end-user posing little-to-no systemic risk. 80 U.S. Treasury, PotentialEmerging Threats to U.S. FinancialStability, 2011 FSOC ANNUAL 20 REPORT 132, http://www.treasury.gov/initiatives/fsoc/Documents/Potential%20Emerging/ Threats%20to%20U.S.%2OFinancial%2OStability.pdf. 81 Monica Billio et al., Measuring Systemic Risk in the Financeand Insurance Sectors, 1 (MIT Sloan School of Mgmt., Working Paper No. 4774-10), available at http://www.bis.org/bcbs/ events/sfrworkshopprogramme/billio.pdf. As one scholar notes, a clear definition of systemic risk also has public policy implications: it "would set boundaries or limits on bailouts," because, in particular, if a financial firm's failure does not satisfy the definition, "then there would be no rationale for the government to bail out that firm or its creditors." John B. Taylor, Defining Systemic Risk Operationally, in SYSTEMIC RISK IN THEORY AND IN PRACTICE 33, 33-34 (George Shultz et al. ed,, 2010), available at http://media.hoover.org/sites/default/files/documents/EndingGovernment BailoutsasWeKnow Them_33.pdf. Additionally, it "may create heightened public policy concerns" in the form of a collective action problem "because it is not in the interest of an individual financial institution to take into account the full potential costs of the risks of its own actions." Edward V. Murphy, CONG. RESEARCH SERV., R42545, WHAT Is SYSTEMIC RISK? DOES IT APPLY TO RECENT JP MORGAN LOSSEs? 2 (2012), availableat http:// www.fas.org/sgp/crs/misc/R42545.pdf. CARDOZO PUB. LAW POLICY d'- ETHICS J 204 [Vol. 12:183 prices began to rise far above historical values.8 2 Analysts "attribute the rapid growth in the demand for homes and the associated rise in house prices to unusually low interest rates, large capital inflows, rapid income growth, and innovations in the mortgage market."83 With a favorable financial climate, as well as federal policies" and broader cultural attitudes that have strongly encouraged home ownership, commercial banks and mortgage originators satisfied increasing demand from Main Street. Issuance of nonprime mortgage loans, especially those with unconventional terms, grew rapidly: while nonprime loans were just 9 percent of all new mortgage originations in 2001, they jumped to 40 percent in 2006.85 Most "nonprime mortgage loans were made to homebuyers with weak credit histories, minimal down payments, low income-toloan ratios, or other deficiencies that prevented them from qualifying for a prime loan."16 Given that nonprime mortgage loans carry a higher risk of borrower default than prime loans,8 7 many originating lenders had offset some of the associated risk by selling the loans to banks and other financial institutions.8 8 In addition, some of these buyers would securitize these mortgage loans, a process involving the packaging of these loans and the subsequent distribution of securities to finance the purchase of James Bullard, Christopher J. Nealy & David C. Wheelock, Systemic Risk and the FinanREVIEW 403, 405 (Sept./Oct. 2009), http://research.stlouisfed.org/publications/review/09/09/part l/Bullard.pdf. 82 cial Crisis: A Primer, 91 FED. REs. BANK OF ST. Louis 8 Id The U.S. federal government has historically encouraged homeownership through a variety of means, namely through providing favorable tax treatment to homeowners and purchasing mortgage debt by government-sponsored entities such as Freddie Mac, Fannie Mae, and the Federal Home Loan Banks. See, e.g., 26 U.S.C.A. § 163 (West 2013) (allowing income tax filers to deduct mortgage interest payments on a primary residence); 12 U.S.C.A. § 2901 (West 1977) ("The Community Reinvestment Act," encouraging homeownership for low-income earners). 85 See Bullard, supra note 82, at 405. 84 86 Id 87 The classification of mortgage loans as either "nonprime" or "prime" reflects the risk that a borrower will default on the loan. In popular vernacular, the term "subprime" and "nonprime" are sometimes used interchangeably; however, as some researchers point out, this distinction can sometimes prove elusive. See, e.g., Rajdeep Sengupta & William R. Emmons, What is Subprime Lending?, EcoN. SYNOPSEs (2007), http://research.stlouisfed.org/publicationsles/07/ ES0713.pdf (highlighting that, because "unlike prime mortgages, subprime mortgages are not homogenous," a simpler way to classify mortgages by their respective risks of borrower default is to "define a prime mortgage and then classify other non-prime mortgages as "subprime" or "near-prime"). 88 See Bullard, supra note 82, at 405. 2013]1 SUBSTANCE VS. FORM 205 these loans. 89 The securities to be distributed would most commonly take the form of residential-mortgage backed securities (hereinafter "RMBS") and commercial-mortgage backed securities (hereinafter "CMBS").90 Thus, in contrast to simple buyer-seller transactions, which would have usually involved sophisticated institutional parties, securitization opened up the secondary market of mortgage loans to many other investors, particularly people on Main Street. This aspect of risk spreading became an important conduit of systemic risk, since the securitization process necessarily entails a certain level of interconnectedness. The practice of buying and selling mortgage loans has been commonplace since the Great Depression, with the creation of governmentsponsored enterprises (hereinafter "GSEs") 9 ' such as Fannie Mae, "to assist private markets in providing a steady supply of funds for housing."9 2 GSEs finance their purchases of large pools of mortgage loans The practice of through the sale of bonds in the capital markets. securitizing financial assets is also not novel: mortgage-backed securitization first gained widespread acceptance in the U.S. during the 1880s.9 ' However, what differentiates the secondary market for and the securitization of mortgage loans in the three decades leading up to the financial crisis from when they were first utilized is the role of nonprime loans and large-scale private securitization by non-GSEs. Before the 1990s most GSEs rarely purchased nonprime loans; instead, the "originating lenders held most nonprime loans, which comprised a relatively small portion of the mortgage market, until they matured."95 And, while private mortgage securitization in the U.S. can be traced back to as early as when mortgage securitization generally gained widespread acceptance in the 1880s, it was not until the 1980s that it reemerged on such a large scale, with mortgage securitizers - both GSEs and private non-GSEs (such as commercial banks and large investment 89 SECURITIZATION OF FINANCIAL ASSETS 90 § 1.01 (Jason H.P. Kravitt, ed., 2d ed. 2008). Id 91 See FEDERAL NATIONAL MORTGAGE ASSOCIATION, GOVERNMENT-SPONSORED ENTER- PRisEs (2013), http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/budget/fy2013/assets/gov.pdf. Id. at 1431. 93 See Bullard supra note 82, at 405. 94 See Kenneth A. Snowden, Mortgage Companies and Mortgage Securitization in the Late Nineteenth Century (2007), http://www.uncg.edulbae/people/snowden/Wat-jmcb-aug07.pdf. 95 See Bullard, supra note 82, at 403, 405. 92 206 CARDOZO PUB. LAW POLICY 6- ETHICSJ. o 12:183 [Vol. banks) - engaged in intense competition with one another, with nonGSEs eventually overtaking GSE securitization in 2005.6 A secondary market in mortgage loans and the subsequent securitization thereof has its advantages. By allowing lenders to free up capital that would have otherwise been retained as collateral to mitigate borrower defaults, lenders receive an extra source of capital via proceeds received from mortgage pool sales and may extend loans to more borrowers. Securitization not only provides the same advantages, but "[u]nlike whole loan sales and participations, securitization is often used to market small loans that would be difficult to sell on a stand-alone basis." 97 Moreover, by packaging mortgage loans into different "tranches" that reflect the relative riskiness of a group of pooled mortgages, securitizers are also better able to meet investor demand, since investors are able to make investments that match their appetites for risk. Especially given the long-term nature of mortgages, a secondary market in mortgage loans and the subsequent securitization thereof promotes liquidity and efficiency. However, the potential to almost infinitely spread and offset risk comes at the price of moral hazard. If an originating lender knows that it is able to sell a loan rather than hold it until maturity," it may have less of an incentive to ensure that a borrower is creditworthy."9 Indeed, many analysts contend that "lax underwriting standards contributed to the high rate of nonprime loan delinquencies."' Moreover, private GSEs such as large investment banks recognized that securitization by its very nature could continue past the initial stage of packaging and selling RMBSs and CMBSs. In particular, collateralized debt obligations (hereinafter "CDOs") combine multiple RMBSs or CMBSs (or parts of either), and investment banks would sell portions of a given CDO's income stream .'0 Further compounding this problem is the creation of synthetic CDOs, instruments that transfer the credit risk of a referenced portfolio 96 See Michael Simkovic, Competiton and Crisisin Mortgage Securitization, 88 IND. L.J. 213, 219 (2013), available at http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstractid=1924831. 97 SECURITIZATION, supra note 89 (internal citation removed). 98 The typical maturity for a mortgage loan is 30 years. AN INVESTOR'S GUIDE TO PASSTHROUGH AND COLLATERALIZED MORTGAGE SECURITIES, THE BOND MARKET AssoCIATION 4, http://www.freddiemac.com/mbs/docs/aboutMBS.pdf (last accessed November 18, 2013). 99 See Bullard, supra note 82, at 403, 405. 100 See id. 101 See id. at 406. SUBSTANCE VS. FORM 2013] 207 of CDSs. 1 0 2 While the structure of synthetic CDOs is complex and beyond the scope of this Note, the role they played in the financial crisis may be thought of as "merely bets" in form of CDSs "on the performance of real mortgage-related securities, "103 such as RMBSs, CMBSs, or (non-synthetic) CDOs.'0 o In addition, credit rating agencies assigned high ratings to many of these mortgage-related securities: assuming that house prices would rise, they believed most nonprime loans would have performed well because borrowers could refinance or sell their homes (at a higher price) if they were to default on their mortgages.' 0 5 However, housing prices began to fall significantly and borrowers owed more on their homes than their homes were worth - a situation that "created an incentive simply to default."10 6 When home prices began to fall and a significant number of borrowers began defaulting, RMBSs, CMBSs, CDOs and synthetic CDOs referencing these mortgage loans also began to default.'0 7 As a result, many banks and investors who held large portfolios of these financial instruments experienced substantial losses. 0 8 This domino effect that rippled throughout the entire economy encapsulates the systemic risk that has largely characterized the financial crisis of 2008. B. FinancialInstitutions, Non-financial institutions, and Systemic risk Many working definitions of systemic risk implicitly assume that non-financial institutions propagate little to no systemic risk.' 09 As discussed below, this assumption is faulty for a number of reasons. 102 See MICHAEL S. GIBSoN, UNDERSTANDING THE RISK OF SYNTHETIC CDOs (July 2004), http://www.federalreserve.gov/pubs/feds/2004/200436/200436pap.pdf. 103 FINANCIAL CRISIS INQUIRY COMMISSION, THE FINANCIAL CRISIS INQUIRY REPORT xxiv (2011), http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/GPO-FCIC/pdf/GPO-FCIC.pdf. Synthetic CDOs were complex paper transactions involving credit default swaps. Unlike the traditional cash CDO, synthetic CDOs contained no actual tranches of mortgage-backed securities, or even tranches of other CDOs. Instead, they simply referenced these mortgage securities and thus were bets on whether borrowers would pay their mortgages. In the place of real mortgage assets, these CDOs contained credit default swaps and did not finance a single home purchase. Id. at 142. 104 Id. at 142. 105 See Bullard, supra note 82, at 403, 406. 106 See id. at 406. 107 See id. 108 See id. 109 See, e.g., Adam J. Levitin, In Defense ofBailouts, 99 GEo L.J. 435, 514 n.45 (2011). 208 i. CARDOZO PUB. LAW POLICY & ETHICS V: 12:183 [Vol. The view that financial institutions are inherently systemically riskier than non-financial institutions Many scholars believe that financial institutions pose an inherently greater potential for propagating systemic risk than institutions whose businesses are primarily non-financial in nature because of three primary reasons: the interconnected nature of financial institutions, financial institutions' prominent use of leverage, and the mismatch between assets and liabilities that inheres in the business of financial institutions. 10 Because financial institutions are an important source of capital both for non-financial and other financial institutions, they are, by the very nature of business in which they engage, interconnected to many other institutions that depend on their continued operation. As one group of scholars explains: [T]he function of (mainly) banks as financial intermediaries - thereby being a conditio sine qua non for funding of consumption and investments of many of economic participants - implies a close relation with the real economy. In other words: a disruption of this function has direct impact on activities in the real economy. This puts financial institutions at the centre of the systemic risk discussion and the impact of other sectors is therefore mostly discussed in terms of indirect contagion via the financial sector. 1 By contrast, this type of interconnectedness is not as common among non-financial institutions.1 12 While the default of a non-financial institution may directly affect its creditors, suppliers, and some of its customers, rarely, it is argued, does it impact much beyond that in the greater economy. 1 3 Moreover, because evidence suggests a strong correlation between the amount of financial leverage that an institution utilizes and the industry in which it belongs," financial institutions are often highly leveraged in comparison to non-financial institutions. That is, they 110 See Bullard, supra note 82. 111 BERT TIEBEN ET AL., CURTAILING COMMODITY DERIVATIVE MARKETS 12, http://www .energie-nederland.nl/wp-content/uploads/docs/SEO-rapport-Curtailing-Commodity-Deriva tive-Markets.pdf. 112 Bullard, supra note 82, at 408. 113 Alan Greenspan, Addressing Systemic Risk, WALL ST. J., June 19, 3009, http://online.wsj .com/article/SBl24542154883031489.html. 114 Compare Financial Leverage across Diferent Sector, ANALYXIT.BLOGSPOT.COM, http:// analyxit.blogspot.com/2012/05/compare-financial-leverage-across.html. 2013] SUBSTANCE VS. FORM 209 "fund a substantial portion of their assets by issuing debt rather than selling equity.""' For example, many investment banks prior to the financial crisis had debt-to-equity ratios of approximately 25-1, meaning that for every $100 in assets a given investment bank had, it funded those assets with $96 of debt on average, leaving only $4 in equity."' The nature of financial services requires the use of leverage since financial institutions generate profit from the use of other people's money. Conversely, a non-financial enterprise such as a technology or pharmaceutical company may need a larger amount of cash on hand to support its continued research and development work, thereby limiting it in the amount of leverage it can utilize. Maintaining an appropriate balance of debt to equity is crucial to the financial longevity of any institution utilizing leverage, since leverage increases the return on equity when the market works in favor of institution, but also increases the risk of failure when the market works against it.' 1 7 When we consider this alongside the interconnectedness of dealers and participants in the CDS market, the fact that leverage can magnify potential losses means that it can also compound the threat of systemic risk originating from financial institutions: the "web of credit derivatives means that the financial fragility of one firm can increase the fragility of other firms or of the entire financial system.""' Financial institutions also have a tendency "to finance their holdings of relatively illiquid long-term assets with short-term debt," 9 " a 115 Bullard, supra note 82, at 409. U.S. Gov'T PRINTING OFFICE, ECONOMIC REPORT OF THE PRESIDENT 71 (Jan. 2009), http://www.nber.org/erp/2009_erp.pdf. As the authors of this report point out, this practice can be conceptualized as investment banks owning investments with only a 4% down payment. Id. Indeed, the concept of leverage is perhaps more intuitive in the context of mortgage financing: using the same figures, if an individual were to purchase a home at the fair market value of $ 100 (assets), and to finance the purchase with $10,000 of her own money as a down payment (equity) and the remainder of the purchase price with a mortgage loan of $90,000 (debt), she would be utilizing a leverage ratio of 10 to 1. 117 Bullard, supra note 82, at 409. 118 Erik F. Gerding, Credit Derivatives, Leverage, and Financial Regulation's Missing Macroeconomic Dimension, 8 BERKELEY Bus. L.J. 29, 42 (2011). 119 Short-term debts are "all debts and other liabilities that are payable within one year." Debt, BLACK'S LAW DICTIONARY (9th ed. 2009). The value of a company's short-term debts is very important when determining a company's financial health: If the account is larger than the company's cash and cash equivalents, this suggests that the company may be in poor financial health and does not have enough cash to pay off its short-term debts. Although short-term debts are due within a year, there may be a portion of the long-term debt included in this account. This portion per116 tains to payments that must be made on any long-term debt throughout the year. 210 CARDOZO PUB. LAW POLICY 6r ETHICS [1 12:183 [Vol. mismatch that inheres in the business of capital funding, and one that makes financial institutions more vulnerable to distinctly financial risks, such as interest rate and liquidity shocks.' 20 For example, commercial banks have traditionally used demand deposits from customers to fund the loans they make to other individuals and businesses.121 Similarly, many investment banks and other non-bank financial institutions have used commercial paper, 1 2 2 repurchase agreements (hereinafter "repos"),1 2 3 and other sources of short-term funding to finance long-term investments. The potential for systemic risk here is that if "depositors suddenly pull their funds from a commercial bank or lenders refuse to purchase a securities firm's commercial paper or repos, the bank or securities firm could be forced into bankruptcy."1 24 The failure of investment bank Bear Sterns and its subsequent government-backed acquisition by JPMorgan Chase & Co. in 2008 was the result of this very reason.1 25 By contrast, the dominant assets of most non-financial institutions are fixed plant and equipment, which are especially illiquid assets in that they rarely trade in active markets. The "consequence is a Short-term Debt, INVESTOPEDIA, http://www.investopedia.com/terms/s/shorttermdebt.asp (last accessed Nov. 20, 2013). 120 Bullard, supra note 82, at 409. 121 Id 122 Commercial paper is an "instrument, other than cash, for the payment of money." Paper, BLACK'S LAw DICTIONARY (9th ed. 2009). Commercial paper is not usually backed by any form of collateral, so only firms with high-quality debt ratings will easily find buyers without having to offer a substantial discount (higher cost) for the debt issue. A major benefit of commercial paper is that it does not need to be registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) as long as it matures before nine months (270 days), making it a very cost-effective means of financing. The proceeds from this type of financing can only be used on current assets (inventories) and are not allowed to be used on fixed assets, such as a new plant, without SEC involvement. Commercial Paper, INvESTOPEDiA, http://www.investopedia.com/terms/c/commercialpaper.asp (last accessed Nov. 20, 2013). 123 A repo is a "short-term loan agreement by which one party sells a security to another party but promises to buy back the security on a specified date at a specified price." Repurchase Agreement, BLACK'S LAW DICTIONARY (9th ed. 2009). 124 Bullard, supra note 82, at 409. 125 See U.S. Gov't Printing Office, March 2008: The Fall ofBear Stearns, in THE FINANCAL CRISIS INQUIRY REPORT 280, 291 (2011), http://www.finrm.com/fcic-final-reportchapterl5 .pdf (Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission conclusion that the failure of Bear Stearns was "caused by its exposure to risky mortgage assets, its reliance on short-term funding, and its high leverage. . . . Bear experienced runs by repo lenders, hedge fund customers, and derivatives counterparties and was rescued by a government-assisted purchase by JP Morgan because the government considered it too interconnected to fail."). SUBSTANCE VS. FORM 2013] 211 need for a much larger capital cushion of one-third to one-half of the value of assets, compared with only 5% to 15% for financial firms."1 2 6 ii. Systemic Risk is Not Generated Uniformly Across All Financial Institutions While it is true that financial institutions generally utilize leverage to a greater extent than non-financial institutions, it is critical to acknowledge how it is utilized intra-industry. Many investment banks and non-bank financial institutions were grossly overleveraged prior to the financial crisis, but many commercial banks were not. 1 2 7 Unlike investment banks and non-bank financial institutions, commercial banks that engage solely in traditional savings and lending activities "are subject to [more stringent] minimum capital requirements," and, on average, "had leverage ratios of approximately 12 to 1.1" prior to the financial crisis, while investment banks had an average of 25 to 1.128 Thus, to the extent that leverage magnifies the propagation of systemic risk from financial institutions to other institutions interconnected with them, investment banks and other non-bank financial institutions arguably have the potential to propagate more systemic risk than commercial banks. iii. Non-Financial Institutions and Systemic risk Financial institutions act as intermediaries and cut across multiple industries whose businesses rely upon them as potential sources of capital. Thus, one could posit that a marginal increase in a financial institution's contractual relationships increases its exposure to risk and its ability to transmit risk.12 9 However, this perspective is overly simplistic because it fails to appreciate the quality of those exposures: The sheer number of contracts, however, is not sufficient to gauge systemic risk. Nor is it clear what that number means because a firm's connections both expose it to risk and transmit risk. Fewer connections mean fewer exposures, but also mean each exposure 126 Alan Greenspan, Addressing Systemic Risk, WALL ST. J. (June 19, 3009), http://online.wsj .com/article/SBl24542154883031489.html. 127 Bullard, supra note 82. 128 Id. 129 See e.g., Ross A. Hammond, Systemic Risk in the FinancialSystem: Insights from Network Science 1 (Pew Fin. Reform Project, Briefing Paper No. 12, 2009), availableat http://www.pewfr .Org/admin/project. reports/files/EPHammondNetworks-final-TF-Correction.pdf. CARD OZO PUB. LAW POLICY & ETHICS J 212 [Vol. 12:183 might be more important. On the flip side, fewer connections mean fewer opportunities to transmit the contagion of failure.130 In other words, an institution could be deemed highly interconnected by virtue of the number of contractual relationships it has entered into, but may nonetheless be comparatively less systemically risky because its exposures are all relatively low-risk (e.g., it utilizes little leverage and invests in mostly low-risk securities such as Treasury securitiesl 3 1 ). If the converse of this statement is true - that an institution may be more systemically risky if its exposures are all higher risk - then the fact that its services are primarily non-financial in nature should be of no import in the context of systemic risk. Indeed, non-financial institutions may propagate systemic risk to the broader economy through various risk transmission mechanisms. For example, counterparty contagion, "or the domino effect, occurs when the failure of one firm leads directly to the failure of other firms that are its counterparties because the counterparties relied on payment or future business from the initial failed firm." 1 32 This problem may manifest itself in the non-financial context when a major manufacturer fails (e.g., through bankruptcy and subsequent liquidation) and owes a substantial sum to one of its suppliers. The manufacturer's failure leads to the supplier's failure, the supplier's failure leads to the failure of its own suppliers, and so on.' 33 The same type of reaction may also manifest itself when the manufacturer's failure leads to the supplier's loss of future business with the manufacturer, and so on.134 Counterparty contagion transpired when the U.S. federal government injected over $80 billion in capital into the breach of the thenimpending bankruptcies of auto-manufacturers General Motors and Chrysler:13 1 Levitin, supra note 109, at 465. Treasury securities are bonds issued by the U.S. government and come in three different varieties, depending on their maturities: Treasury bills (mature in one year or less), bonds (in two to 10 years) and notes (in 10 years or more). Treasury Securities Definition, THE STREET, availableat http://www.thestreet.com/topic/4728 1/treasury-securities.html (last visited Nov. 30, 2013). 132 Levirin, supra note 109, at 455. 133 Id. at 456 (describing this type of counterparry contagion as "obligor contagion"). 130 131 134 Id. 135 David Littman, What if Taxpayers Hadn't Bailed Out GM and Chrysler, DBUSINESS.COM (Sept./Oct. 2012), http://www.dbusiness.com/DBusiness/September-October-2012/What-ifTaxpayers-Hadnt-Bailed-Out-GM-and-Chrysler/. 2013] SUBSTANCE VS. FORM 213 Moreover, in the absence of taxpayer-supplied cash to GM, those who support the government-led bailout suggest the likelihood of a severe cascade. Supporters assert that GM's liquidation would have sunk hundreds of suppliers (small and large), as the automaker's purchasing requirements spanned such an immense and dependable cross-section of clients among scores of industries throughout Michigan and the rest of the country. The reasoning is rational: Already mired in a steep recession, many of GM's suppliers, no longer hopeful of receiving ontime payments for deliveries, would have declared insolvency - causing Ford, Chrysler, and possibly other Michigan-headquartered automakers and suppliers to topple.' 3 Even when non-financial institutions are not interconnected by way of a counterparty contagion effect, they face the problem of information contagion, "which occurs when the failure of one firm results in market confidence eroding in similar firms, which then fail when they are no longer able to obtain financing or conduct transactions on viable terms." 1 3 7 Information contagion similarly transpired during the General Motors and Ford Motor crisis of 2005, when the three major rating agencies downgraded the credit ratings of both firms from investment grade to speculative grade, sending a ripple throughout the entire CDS market as investors began selling their respective CDS holdings in the two firms. 138 In the case of the food and hospitality industry, one author uses the spread of contagious illnesses as an example of information contagion: [A] salmonella outbreak in McDonald's hamburger meat would likely lead to a contraction of business at Burger King, Wendy's, and other restaurants serving ground beef because of a fear that their food might also be tainted, regardless of whether they share a supply chain with McDonald's or where in the supply chain the contamination occurred. '3 Thus, the two central characteristics that have largely characterized systemic risk - interconnectedness and large concentrations of exposures to risky assets - are not unique to financial institutions. Id Levitin, supra note 109, at 458. 138 Viral Acharya et. al., Liquidity Risk and Correlation Risk: A Clinical Study of the General Motors and Ford Downgrade of May 2005, (London Business School, Working Paper, June 2008), http://www.london.edulfacultyandresearch/research/docs/june_08.pdf. 139 Levitin, supra note 109, at 459. 136 137 214 CARDOZO PUB. LAW POLICY & ETHICS J iv. [Vol. 12:183 Speculation and Systemic risk Additionally, excessive speculation in derivatives markets could trigger systemic risk in the broader markets.14 0 In the case of CDSs, buyers are not required to own any of the reference entity's underlying securities. At a theoretical level, an OTC market for naked CDSs leaves open the possibility that a potentially unlimited number of CDSs referencing one particular entity could be bought and sold.' Such a possibility may exacerbate the risk of seller defaults because the naked CDS market's opacity could prevent sellers from adequately accounting for the credit risk of the CDSs they are selling. In turn, a given seller's default increases the chance that a buyer could default on its own outstanding obligations to third parties. 1 4 2 This effect may ripple throughout the markets creating systemic risk if these buyers have also sold CDSs to other parties. Given that a relatively small and interconnected group of institutions engage in the majority of derivatives trading, "massive derivatives losses at one firm leading to defaults could quickly lead to a chain reaction of defaults among other firms." 143 v. Lack of Transparency and Systemic Risk Compounding the problem of interconnectedness in an OTC derivatives market is its lack of transparency. Allowing buyers and sellers of CDSs to engage in private, off-exchange dealings may save transaction costs and other costs related to regulatory compliance,14' but could 140 Laurin C. Ariail, The Impact of Dodd-Frank on End-Users Hedging Commercial Risk in over-the-CounterDerivativesMarkets, 15 N.C. BANKING INST. 175, 179 (2011) (internal citation removed). 141 Therefore, it is possible for the total notional gross values of outstanding CDS policies to vastly exceed the par value of the underlying bonds of the entity referenced in those CDS policies. 142 For example, if Insurance Company D feels fairly confident that Client X's chance of default is low and decides to become an active seller of CDSs referencing Client X - but has gravely miscalculated Client X's financial health which is actually poor - Insurance Company D's own solvency could be threatened when Client X defaults and the buyers of the CDSs seek settlement. In turn, the solvency of those CDS buyers could be threatened if Insurance Company D fails to honor its financial obligations to them, especially if those buyers have concentrated their exposure to particularly risky entities and are relying on cash proceeds from settlements of those CDSs to meet their third-party obligations. 143 Ariail, supra note 140, at 179. 144 See, e.g., David Oaten & Robert Sichel, Shock awaits unprepared thanks to Dodd-Frank, PENSIONS & INVESTS. (Sept. 2, 2013), availableat http://www.pionline.com/article/20130902/ PRINT/309029993/shock-awaits-unprepared-thanks-to-dodd-frank ("[Critics] lament the costs of clearing associated with establishing relationships with clearinghouses, hiring clearing mem- 2013] SUBSTANCE VS. FORM 215 easily create costs in other ways. Namely, an OTC regime deprives the marketplace of important information, particularly in the form of price information and the financial positions of the participants involved, about each trade. A marketplace lacking transparency is prone to being an inefficient one because participants may lack the information necessary to exercise fully informed investment decisions."' For example, a prospective buyer of an OTC derivative may have little idea of the extent to which its seller is entrenched in other OTC markets, information that could be useful to the buyer in determining the amount of counterparty risk it is assuming - especially if the seller is already heavily entrenched in derivatives contracts referencing default-prone entities. Additionally, some research supports the finding that pre-trade transparency in an OTC market actually reduces transaction costs to the buyer, which in turn improves market liquidity and increases the gains made from trading. 4 6 Dodd-Frank recognizes the threat of systemic risk posed by an entirely OTC derivatives market and imposes certain data collection, central clearing, and exchange trading requirements. As discussed in Part IV, because the commercial end-user exception to clearing requires that the entity claiming the exception be non-financial in nature and engaged in a given swaps transactions for non-speculative purposes, this Note also analyzes systemic risk in relation to the type of entity involved and the purpose underlying a particular swaps transaction. bers, negotiating legal agreements, the increased margin requirements and new compliance procedures."). 145 Indeed, if the cornerstone of efficient markets theory is that the "lower the transaction costs in a market, including the costs of obtaining information and trading, the more efficient the market," then the lack of transparency in the CDS market also makes it inefficient. Steven L. Jones & Jeffrey M. Netter, Efficient Capital Markets, THE CONCISE ENCYCLOPEDIA OF EcON. (2008), http://www.econlib.org/library!Enc/EfficientCapitalMarkets.html. The efficient markets theory assumes that greater transparency leads to greater efficiency and liquidity. For a discussion challenging that assumption in specific situations involving OTC markets such as that for CDSs, see Marco Avellaneda & Rama Cont, Transparency in Credit Default Swap Markets, FIN. CONCEPTS 3 (July 2010), http://www.isda.org/c and alpdf/CDSMarketTransparency.pdf (arguing that "the underlying assumption that more transparency necessarily increases liquidity is far from obvious, especially in OTC markets where the incentive for market participants to trade is partly based on their asymmetric information," and that "increasing transparency has a cost and any discussion of efficiency must assess the benefits of increased transparency and weigh them against these costs."). 146 See, e.g., Fan Chen & Zhuo Zhong, Pre-trade Transparencyin Over-the-CounterMarkets 2 (Univ. of Okla., Working Paper, Aug. 2012), http://www.ou.edu/dam/price/Finance/CFS/paper/pdf/Fan%20Chen%20Paper.pdf (concluding that "greater pre-trade transparency improves market liquidity and increases the gains from [OTC] trade" in corporate bond markets). 216 CARDOZO PUB. LAW POLICY 6-ETHICS J III. [Vol. 12:183 DODD-FRANK AND CALLS FOR REFORM A. Overview of Dodd-Frank On July 21, 2010, President Barack Obama signed into law the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, an "Act [t]o promote the financial stability of the United States by improving accountability and transparency in the financial system, to end 'too big to fail,' to protect the American taxpayer by ending bailouts, to protect consumers from abusive financial services practices, and for other purposes."' 47 Many commentators and scholars consider Dodd-Frank to be the most sweeping legislative overhaul of the financial and banking system in the United States since the Great Depression,' some having coined it the "New Financial Deal."1 4 9 In accord with its purported objectives, Dodd-Frank changed the regulatory regime by creating 5 o and eliminating 51 certain federal agencies, and increasing various agencies' oversight of key financial institutions1 52 (particularly those identified as "systemically important"1 53), 147 DODD-FRANK, Supra note 19. 148 See, e.g., Press Release, U.S. Dept. of Treasury, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner Remarks on Passage of the "Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act" (July 15, 2010), http://www.treasury.gov/press-center/press-releases/Pages/tg777.aspx ("the strongest financial reforms this country has considered since the Great Depression"); see generally, Saule T. Omarova, The Dodd-FrankAct: A New Dealfor A New Age?, 15 N.C. BANKING INST. 83 (2011). 149 See, e.g., David Skeel, Making Sense ofthe New FinancialDeal, 5 LIBERTY U.L. REv. 181 (2011). 150 Most notably, it created the FSOC to oversee financial institutions and identify risks to the financial stability of the United States. See 12 U.S.C.A. § 5321 (West 2010). See also, 12 U.S.C.A. § 5342 (West 2010) (creating the Office of Financial Research within the Treasury to support FSOC); 31 U.S.C.A. § 301 (West 2012) (creating the Office of National Insurance within the Treasury); 15 USCA § 78o-7 (West 2010) (creating the Office of Credit Rating Agencies within the SEC); 12 U.S.C.A. § 5491 (West 2010) (creating an independent Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection within the Federal Reserve). 151 See 12 U.S.C.A. § 5413 (West 2010) (eliminating the Office of Thrift Supervision, "OTS," and, as authorized by same section, transferring its functions, powers, authorities, rights and duties to the Federal Reserve, the OCC, or the FDIC). 152 See, e.g., 12 U.S.C.A. § 5412 (West 2010) (empowering the Federal Reserve to regulate thrift holding companies and subsidiaries of thrift holding companies, and the OCC to regulate national banks and federal thrifts of all sizes); 12 U.S.C.A. § 5321 (providing that FSOC is to evaluate systemic risk). 153 "[FSOC] is empowered to identify 'systemically important' nonbank financial companies, thus bringing such companies under regulation by the Federal Reserve, and to recommend heightened prudential standards for the Federal Reserve to impose on these companies. [FSOC] also has the power to recommend heightened prudential standards to primary financial regulators to apply to any activity that [it] identifies as contributing to systemic risk." Summary ofthe 2013] SUBSTANCE VS. FORM 217 hedge funds, and investment intermediaries.15 1 It significantly strengthens protections in the areas of credit card and bank account fees, mortgage lending, student loans, and mutual fund information access,'15 and creates an independent agency to oversee consumer protection reforms.15 6 It imposes stringent regulatory capital requirements' 57 on financial institutions and prohibits proprietary trading and certain fund activities by bank holding companies and their affiliate entities. 55 To help contain systemic risk in the face of another financial crisis, it implements a resolution planning and liquidation process to allow for the orderly winding down of certain failing financial institutions. 5 9 DoddDodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer ProtectionAct, Enacted into Law on July 21, 2010, DAVIS POLK (2010), available at http://www.davispolk.com. 154 See, e.g., 15 U.S.C.A. %§ 80b-2 et. seq. (West 2010) (Title IV of Dodd-Frank, requiring registration of and reporting from certain hedge funds and investment advisers pursuant to criteria established by the SEC). 6 155 See, e.g., 15 U.S.C.A. %§ 1 93p, 1693q (West 2010); 12 U.S.C.A. § 5603 (West 2010). 156 See 12 U.S.C.A. § 5491 (West 2010) (creating the Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection). 157 See 12 U.S.C.A. § 5371 (West 2010). s58See 12 U.S.C.A. § 1851 (West 2010). Better known as the "Volcker Rule," its application may be conceptualized as prohibiting banks who are involved in the business of deposit-taking from buying and selling securities for their own account rather than those of their clients. Some commentators contrast the Volcker Rule to The Banking Act of 1933 (hereinafter "Glass-Steagall Act"), which was passed shortly after the Great Depression and required the separation of commercial (i.e., deposit-taking, lending) activities from investment activities. See, e.g., Louis Uchitelle, Glass-Steagallvs. the Volcker Rule, N.Y. TIMES, January 22, 2010, available at http:// economix.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/01/22/glass-steagall-vs-the-volcker-rule; 12 U.S.C.A. § 227 (West 1933). In 1999 Congress passed the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, which repealed the GlassSteagall Act in part and thus removed much of the latter's division between commercial and investment banking activities. See GRAMM-LEACH-BLILEY Ac, Pub. L. No. 106-102, 113 Stat 1338 (1999). Many commentators suggest that this repeal contributed to the financial collapse of 2008. See, e.g., Systematic Risk: Examining Regulators Ability to Respond to Threats to the FinancialSystem: Hearing Before the H. Comm. On FinancialServices, 110th Cong. 12 (2007) (statement of Robert Kuttner) available at http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CHRG-1 Ohhrg399 03/htrml/CHRG-110hhrg39903.htm. But cf Jerry W. Markham, The Subprime Crisis-A Test Match for the Bankers: Glass-Steagall vs. Gramm-Leach-Bliley, 12 U. PA. Bus. L. 1081 (2010) (arguing that the events that led to the passage of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act did not lay the groundwork for the subprime crisis of 2008); 7 THOMAs LEE HAZEN, THE INTERTWINING OF FINANCIAL SERVICES: COMMERCIAL BANKS, INVESTMENT BANKING, AND INVESTMENT SERVICEs § 22.6, TREATISE ON THE LAw OF SECURITIES REGULATION (2009) (observing that the division between commercial and investment banking activities increasingly eroded in the years leading up to legislative repeal of Glass-Steagall because of liberal administrative and judicial interpretations, and the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act served as a legislative answer to realigning an increasingly conflicting regulatory scheme). 159 12 U.S.C.A. § 5365 (West 2010) (requiring banks holding $50 billion or more in assets to complete a resolution planning process, the product of which is colloquially referred to as a 218 CARDOZO PUB. LAW POLICY & ETHICS. [[Vol. 12:183 Frank reforms the securitization process by imposing greater disclosure and due diligence requirements,16 0 and requiring certain participants involved in the securitization process to retain some of the credit risk on their own books.' 6 1 And, as is the focus of this Note, Title VII of Dodd-Frank massively overhauls the OTC derivatives market through registration, disclosure, exchange, and clearinghouse requirements.1 6 The above description provides a cursory overview of DoddFrank's main provisions. While the Act spans over sixteen titles and 848 pages, it leaves many substantive provisions unfilled and bestows rulemaking powers on various federal agencies to fill them in. One major law firm estimates that the Act has imposed a total of 398 rulemaking requirements across 11 federal agencies and bureaus.' 6 3 At the time of this Note, approximately only forty percent of the 398 total rulemaking requirements have been met with finalized rules; nearly threequarters of the total rulemaking requirement deadlines have already passed.16' Thus, many provisions have yet to be finalized and promulgated by their respective agencies, an issue that has subjected the Act to increased public scrutiny.16' B. Title VII Bringing Light to the OTC Derivatives Market Congress recognized that an unregulated derivatives market played a large role in laying the groundwork for and exacerbating the financial corporate "Living Will"); 12 U.S.C.A. § 5384 (West 2010) (providing the framework for orderly liquidation of covered financial companies). 160 15 U.S.C.A. %§780, 77g (West 1980, 2012) (imposing certain disclosure, reporting, and due diligence analysis issues involving asset-backed securities). 161 15 U.S.CA. § 78c (2012) (requiring securitizers to retain not less than 5% of the credit risk of certain assets that, through the issuance of an asset-based security, are transferred, sold, or conveyed to a third party). 162 See 15 USCA %§8301 et. seq. 77b (West 2010). 163 Dodd-FrankProgress Report, DAVIs POLK & WARDWELL LLP (Nov. 2013), http://www .davispolk.com/sites/default/files/Nov2013_Dodd.Frank .Progress.Report_0.pd. 164 Id 165 Consider, however, the distinction between required rulemaking and permissive rulemaking. See, e.g., Gabriel D. Rosenberg & Jeremy R. Girton, Beyond "Shall"-Dodd-Frank'sPermissive Rulemakings, Newsletter of the ABA Business Law Section Banking Law Committee, Am. BAR Ass'N. (March 2012), http://apps.americanbar.org/buslaw/committees/CL130000pub/newsletter/201203/rosenberg-girton.pdf (pointing out that there are 198 places in the Act that authorize, but do not require, regulatory action, and presents three dimensions that regulators will need to consider in prioritization of permissive and required rulemaking). 2013] SUBSTANCE VS. FORM 219 meltdown.""' Allowing parties to enter into derivatives contracts on standardized yet entirely privately negotiated terms left open the possibility that parties would not post collateral or margin (or not post an adequate amount thereof). Indeed, large uncollateralized losses accumulated in the OTC derivatives market prior to the financial crisis. 16 7 %Whenthe only parties to OTC contracts are dealers (e.g., protectionsellers, such as AIG) and traders, the dealer entirely absorbs the risk of the trader defaulting, and the trader entirely absorbs the risk of the dealer defaulting. No intermediary such as a clearinghouse would stand between both parties to guarantee payment in case one party fails to make good on its side of the deal. Moreover, an OTC regime allowed derivatives to escape the purview of regulators entirely, leaving regulators toothless in implementing ex ante solutions to mitigate and prevent systemic risk. Title VII of Dodd-Frank imposes a comprehensive regulatory regime by way of the joint rulemakings of primarily the CFTC and SEC. First, it provides for registration of certain participants (i.e., dealers and major participants) in the swaps marketplace with either the CFTC and/ or the SEC.16 Second, it imposes clearing requirements' 6 9 on most swaps transactions and empowers federal regulators to promulgate minimum capital and margin requirements.1 70 Third, it creates recordkeeping and real-time reporting requirements on certain cleared and uncleared swaps transactions, including pricing and volume data.' 7 Fourth, it imposes "business conduct" rules on most dealers and participants to conduct certain due diligence and disclose certain material information.172 Additionally, Title VII contains a controversial 166 The FinancialCrisis Inquiry Report: FinalReport of the National Commission on the Causes of the Financialand Economic Crisis in the United States, U.S. GOV'T PRINTING OFFICE (Jan. 2011), http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/GPO-FCIC/pdf/GPO-FCIC.pdf. 167 See Rena Miller & Kathleen Ruane, The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act: Title VII, Derivatives, CONG. RESEARCH SERV. 4-5 (Nov. 6, 2012), http://assets .Opencrs.com/rpts/R41398_20121106.pdf ("In the OTC market, some contracts required collateral or margin, but not all. There was no standard practice: all contract terms were negotiable. A trade group, the [ISDA], published best practice standards for use of collateral, but compliance was voluntary."). 168 7 U.S.C.A. § 6 (c) (West 2010). 169 7 U.S.C.A. § 2 (West 2008). 170 7 U.S.C.A. § 6s (West 2010). 171 7 U.S.C.A. § 6r (West 2010). 172 7 U.S.C.A. § 6s (West 2010). 220 CARDOZO PUB. LAW POLICY &'ETHICS J [Vol. 12:183 provision that specifically prohibits federal assistance to any "swaps entity."17 3 Title VII does not entirely eliminate the OTC market for all swaps transactions. Instead, the commercial end-user exception allows some swaps transactions to bypass the clearing and exchange requirements if the transaction and one of the counterparties to it meet particular criteria. This exception is premised on the idea that not all entities in the swaps markets (particularly non-financial entities), generate systemic risk, and that such entities primarily use swaps to hedge or mitigate a risk to which they are already exposed and not to speculate. 1 74 Thus, these entities should not have to bear increased transaction, compliance, and other costs that could hamper firm efficiency and overall economic growth.1 7 1 If the real culprit in generating systemic risk was not derivatives generally but rather unregulated and rampant speculation of derivatives by financial institutions, then arguably Dodd-Frank should reflect that conclusion by directing its attention to those entities. Because qualification for the end-user exception first requires a determination of the classification of the entity invoking it, the following section provides an overview of how Dodd-Frank classifies entities involved in the swaps marketplace for purposes of the exception. i. Classifying Swaps and Allocating Jurisdiction Dodd-Frank divides regulatory jurisdiction over the swaps market between the CFTC and SEC, depending on whether a swap is "securitybased," which is within the jurisdiction of the SEC, or has elements of a "mixed" swap, which is subject to joint SEC and CFTC jurisdiction. 176 173 15 U.S.C.A. § 8305 (West 2010) (commonly referred to as "The Lincoln Provision" or "Swaps Push-Out Rule"). The provision requires "commercial banks to cease or divest their participation in certain classes of swap transactions, or lose access to several types of federal assistance," including FDIC insurance and Federal Reserve credit facilities or discount windows. Christopher T. Fowler, The Swaps Push-Out Rule: An Impact Assessment, 15 N.C. BANKING INST. 205 (2011). The government used the latter to extend emergency liquidity to failing financial institutions, such as AIG, during the financial crisis. See Investment in American Inter- national Group supra note 13. See Letter from Christopher Dodd, Chairman, Senate Comm. on Banking & Blanche Lincoln, Chairman, Senate Comm. on Agric., to Barney Frank, Chairman, H. Fin. Servs. Comm. & Colin Peterson, Chairman, H. Comm. on Agric. (June 30, 2010), available at http:// www.truebluenaturalgas.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/2010-06-30DoddLincolnEndUser Letter.pdf. 175 See id. 176 7 U.S.C.A. § 2. 174 20131 SUBSTANCE VS. FORM 221 All other non-security-based swaps are subject to exclusive CFTC jurisdiction."' This jurisdictional bifurcation has resulted in giving the CFTC exclusive jurisdiction over the majority of formerly OTC derivatives."' Pursuant to the rulemaking provisions in Title VII, both agencies have coordinated to set forth finalized operational definitions of these terms.' 79 A swap, in its most general sense, is a "bilateral agreement to exchange cash flows at specified intervals (payment dates) during the agreed-upon life of the transaction (maturity or tenor). 18 0 The cash flows may or may not be a continuous exchange of cash between both parties. s8 Swaps may take many forms, depending on the underlying asset or variable from which they derive their value. CDSs in particular derive their value from the risk of a referenced entity's credit event (e.g., the entity's default), interest rate swaps derive their value from a referenced interest rate, and so on. In the same manner, a "security-based swap" may be conceptualized as a "bilateral, privately negotiated derivative contract in which a protection buyer makes periodic payments to a 177 Id. Using a narrow/broad approach, swaps based on a single security or narrow-based index of securities are "security-based swaps" and regulated by the SEC, while swaps based on broad-based security indices are classified as "swaps" and subject to CFTC regulation. Id. Specifically, it provides that swaps based on commodities or interest rates are treated as "swaps" subject to CFTC oversight, while treatment of a CDS depends on whether it references a singlename security (hereinafter "security-based swap") or index of securities (hereinafter "swap"). Id. In the basic example in Part I involving Speculator X, Title VII would subject the CDS agreement to classification as a security-based swap and subject to SEC oversight. Nonetheless, Title VII requires that the SEC and CFTC establish and maintain comparable requirements to the maximum extent practicable, thus making in many cases these distinctions immaterial. See 15 U.S.C.A. § 8302 (West 2010). 178 Marc Horwitz, David Khrohn & Jay Taylor, Implications to Derivatives Users of the DoddFrank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, 13 INT'L SECURmTIzATIoN & FIN. REP. (No. 14) 8 (July 31, 2010), available at http://www.dlapiper.com/files/Publication/31el5b4e1-91 5a0f-448b-88cc-c8bcb5794368/Presentation/PublicationAttachment/7e565320-2e4f-4d1 33-d9b4ed2dldO2/SR073110_final.pdf ("According to recent estimates, the majority of outstanding OTC derivatives by notional amount would fall under the exclusive jurisdiction of the CFTC. Therefore, the CFTC has primary jurisdiction over the currently composed marketplace for OTC derivatives."). 179 15 U.S.C.A. § 8302; See Further Definition of "Swap Dealer," "Security-Based Swap Dealer," "Major Swap Participant," "Major Security-Based Swap Participant" and "Eligible Contract Participant", 77 Fed. Reg. 30,596-01 (May 23, 2012) (to be codified at 17 C.F.R. Part 1 & 17 C.F.R Part 240). 180 Product Descriptions and Frequently Asked Questions, INT'L SwAPs AND DERIVATIVES Ass'N, http://www.isda.org/educat/faqs.html (last visited Dec. 16, 2013). 181 That is, it could also be a single payment from one party in exchange for either a continuous flow of payments or a single payment from the other party. 222 GARDOZO PUB. LAW POLICY 6- ETHICSJ. [ [Vol. 12:183 protection seller, in return for a contingent payment if a predefined event occurs in a reference security or group of securities."182 ii. Registration of Dealers and Major Participants Dodd-Frank requires an entity involved in the swaps marketplace to register with and report its swaps activity to the SEC and/or the CFTC if it meets the criteria for a "swaps dealer" (hereinafter "SD"), "security-based swaps dealer" (hereinafter "SBSD"), "major swap participant" (hereinafter "MSP"), or "major security-based swaps participant" (hereinafter "MSBSP"). 18 3 Because the criteria for SDs and MSPs are substantially similar to their security-based counterparts,18 1 this Note will refer to both SDs and SBSDs as simply swap dealers or SDs, and both MSPs and MSBSPs as major swap participants or MSPs, unless otherwise indicated. In general, a SD is an entity which: (i) holds itself out as a dealer in swaps; (ii) makes a market in swaps; (iii) regularly enters into swaps with counterparties as an ordinary course of business for its own account; or (iv) engages in any activity causing the person to be commonly known in the trade as a dealer or market maker in swaps. . ." A SD may be classified as such for a "single type or single class or category of swap or activities and considered not to be a swap dealer for other types, classes, or categories of swaps or activities." 186 The CFTC's interpretative guidance provides that the determination of whether an entity is a SD "should consider all relevant facts and circumstances, and focus on the activities of a person that are usual and normal in the person's course of business and identifiable as a swap dealing busiBarry Le Vine, The Derivative Market's Black Sheep: Regulation of Non-Cleared SecurityBased Swaps Under Dodd-Frank, 31 Nw. J. INT'L L. & Bus. 699, 708-09 (2011) (emphasis added). 183 7 U.S.C.A. § 6s (registration of swap dealers and major swap participants); 15 U.S.C.A. § 78o-10 (West 2010) (registration of security-based swap dealers and major security-based swap participants). 184 Cf 7 U.S.C.A. § la (West 2010) (criteria for swap), with 15 U.S.C.A. § 78c (criteria for security-based swap). 185 7 U.S.C.A. § la (West 2010). 182 186 Id 2013] SUBSTANCE VS. FORM 223 ness." 18 7 Specifically excluded from categorization as SDs are entities that are FDIC-insured depository institutions (but only "to the extent [they offer] to enter into a swap with a customer in connection with originating a loan with that customer" "), use swaps for their own account and not as a part of a regular business,'" and engage "in a 'de minimis quantity' of swap dealing"'o which the CFTC has specified as an "aggregate gross notional amount of the swaps . .. over the prior 12 months in connection with dealing activities [not exceeding] $3 billion."' A MSP is any person that is not a SD, and: (i) maintains a substantial position in swaps for any of the major swap categories as determined by the Commission, excluding-(I) positions held for hedging or mitigating commercial risk; and (II) positions maintained by any employee benefit plan. . . for the primary purpose of hedging or mitigating any risk directly associated with the operation of the plan; (ii) whose outstanding swaps create substantial counterparty exposure that could have serious adverse effects on the financial stability of the United States banking system or financial markets; or 187 COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMM'N, FINAL RULEs REGARDING FURTHER DEFIN- ING "SwAP DEALER," "MAJOR SWAP PARTICIPANT" AND "ELIGIBLE CONTRACT PARTICIPANT" 3, available at http://www.cftc.gov/ucm/groups/public/@newsroom/documents/file/msp-ecpfactsheetfinal.pdf 7 U.S.C.A. § la (West 2010). Interestingly, this exception does not apply to the definition of "security-based swap dealer." See 15 U.S.C.A. § 78c. The finalized rules issued by the CFTC further defining "swap dealer" provide that this exclusion applies to any swap that meets the following conditions: * the swap is connected to the financial terms of the loan or is required by loan underwriting criteria to be in place as a condition of the loan in order to hedge the borrower's commodity price risks; * the swap is entered into within 90 days before or 180 days after the date of the loan agreement, or any draw of principal under the loan; * the loan is within the common law meaning of "loan;" and * the insured depository institution is the sole lender or, if it is a participant in a lending syndicate, it is responsible for at least 10% of the loan (otherwise, the notional amount of the swap may not exceed the amount of the insured depository institution's participation). 188 COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMM'N, supra note 187, at 2. 189 7 U.S.C.A. § la. 190 Id 191 COMMODITY FUTUREs TRADING COMM'N, supra note 187, at 3. This last exception also allows "for a phase-in [period] of the de minimis threshold to facilitate orderly implementation of swap dealer requirements .... [during which] would effectively be $8 billion." Id. CARDOZO PUB. LAW POLICY & ETHICS. 224 [[Vol. 12:183 (iii) (I) is a financial entity that is highly leveraged relative to the amount of capital it holds and that is not subject to capital requirements established by an appropriate Federal banking agency; and (II) maintains a substantial position in outstanding swaps in any major swap category as determined by the Commission. 1 92 The definition of MSPs (but not MSBSPs1 9 3) specifically excludes certain subsidiary entities "whose primary business is providing financing, and uses derivatives for the purpose of hedging underlying commercial risks related to interest rate and foreign currency exposures."194 Once an individual or entity meets the criteria for a dealer or major participant, it is required to register with the SEC and/or CFTC and be subject to capital, margin, recordkeeping, and business conduct requirements, as well as duties with respect to special entities. 1 " As discussed below, the determination of whether an entity meets the criteria for dealers or major participants is necessary in determining if an entity may avail itself of the end-user exception, as the exception expressly disqualifies entities that qualify as either dealers or major participants per the registration requirements. iii. Clearing, Trading, and Reporting Without a centralized counterparty, such as a clearinghouse, standing in between dealers and buyers, each party to an OTC derivatives contract fully assumes counterparty credit risk - "the risk . . . that the other party will not perform the contractual obligations" as specified in the swaps agreement.' 9 While margin and collateral requirements help mitigate this risk, such requirements nonetheless "do not take into account the counterparty credit risk that each trade imposes on the rest of the system, allowing systemically important exposures to build up without sufficient capital to mitigate associated risks."' '7 In other words, 7 U.S.C.A. § la. See 15 U.S.C.A. § 78c. Id 195 7 U.S.C.A. § 6s; 15 U.S.C.A. § 78o-10 (mandating minimum capital requirements, and with respect to uncleared swaps, initial and variation margin requirements). 196 U.S. Gov'T ACCOUNTABILITY OFFICE, GAO-09-397-T, SYSTEMIC RISK, REGULATORY OVERSIGHT AND RECENT INITIATIVES To ADDRESS RISK POSED BY CREDrr DEFAULT SwAP 3 (2009), available at http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d09397t.pdf. Credit risk in this context, as it is applied to the buyer and seller, should not be confused with the credit risk of a reference entity to a CDS. 197 Id. 192 193 194 2013] SUBSTANCE VS. FORM 225 even if parties to a derivatives contract are contractually required to post collateral and margin to help mitigate potential losses that may result should one of them default, the lack of any centralized clearing regime makes it difficult to ascertain the frequency and magnitude of losses accumulating throughout the marketplace - a macrofinancial inquiry that is especially relevant in the context of systemic risk. Dodd-Frank attempts to solve this problem by requiring swaps to be cleared if identified by the applicable regulator as required to be cleared, and if a derivatives clearing organization (hereinafter "DCO") or clearing agency, each a type of clearinghouse, accepts the swap for clearing.'" Similar to the registration requirements, the Dodd-Frank creates largely parallel clearing requirements for both swaps and securitybased swaps.' 99 DCOs and clearing agencies must register with their appropriate regulator and meet an extensive list of criteria to ensure that they can fulfill their role in absorbing potentially large losses of counterparties to a swaps trade. 2 0 0 If a clearinghouse is "well-designed and its risks are prudently managed, it can limit counterparty credit risk by absorbing counterparty defaults and preventing transmission of their impacts to other market participants.1"201 They can also provide centralized information on market dealers and participants "by releasing information on open interest, end-of-day prices, and trade volumes," 2 0 2 thereby increasing transparency. If a swap or security-based swap is required to be cleared, it must also be traded on a designated contract market (hereinafter "DCM") or a registered swap execution facility (hereinafter "SEF"), or, in the case of a security-based swap, a national exchange or security-based swap execution facility (hereinafter "SB SEF").2 03 While mandatory clearing mitigates counterparty risk and facilitates transparency through various reporting mechanisms, an exchange requirement simply mandates that "eligible derivatives use a particular type of trade execution venue. "204 198 7 U.S.C.A. § 2; 15 U.S.C.A. § 78c-3. DCOs are used in the case of swaps, and clearing agencies in the case of security-based swaps. 199 Id. 200 In the case of DCOs, see 7 U.S.C.A. § 7a-1 (West 2010) (stipulating that each DCO must have adequate financial, operational and managerial resources, determined by the CFTC). 201 U.S. Gov'T ACCOUNTABILITY OFFICE, supra note 196, at 3. See also supra note 10 (discussion on clearinghouses). 202 U.S. Gov'T ACCOUNTABILITY OFFICE, supra note 196, at 22. 7 U.S.C.A. § 2; 15 U.S.C.A. § 78c-3. R.A., Whats a clearinghouse?,THE EcONOMIsT (Apr. 22, 2010, 4:18 PM), http://www .economist.com/blogs/freeexchange/2010/04/derivatives. "People tend to think of exchanges as 203 204 226 CARDOZO PUB. LAW POLICY & ETHICSJ. V 12:183 [Vol. Clearinghouses may be conceptualized as third parties that guarantee the consummation of trades, while exchange platforms that match up buyers and sellers at pre-disclosed prices. IV. ANALYSIS & SCRUTINY OF THE END-USER EXCEPTION A. Statutory Requirements & Rulemaking Clarification Recognizing that reducing systemic risk and increasing transparency must be balanced against inevitable transaction and compliance costs, Dodd-Frank allows some commercial end-users of swaps and security-based swaps to bypass the clearing and exchange requirements. In particular, the end-user exception allows a commercial end-user to continue utilizing the OTC market if it: (i) is not a financial entity; (ii) is using swaps to hedge or mitigate commercial risk; and (iii) notifies the [CFTC or SEC, as applicable] ... how it generally meets its financial obligations associated with entering into non-cleared swaps.2 0 5 A financial entity for purposes of this exception is defined as a SD, a SBSD, a MSP, a MSBSP, a commodity pool, a private fund, an employee benefit plan, or a "person predominantly engaged in activities that are in the business of banking, or in activities that are financial in nature." 206 The exception allows eligible counterparties who use "affiliate entities predominantly engaged in providing financing for the purchase of the merchandise or manufactured goods of the person" to engage in swaps or security-based swaps under the condition that the affiliate "act on behalf of the person [qualifying for the exception] and as an agent, uses the swap to hedge or mitigate the commercial risk of the person or other affiliate of the person that is not a financial entity." 207 It also allows the CFTC and SEC to exempt farm credit institutions, and credit unions with $10 billion or less in assets from the definition of "financial entity," allowing small financial entities (e.g., small banks) to qualify for the end-user exception, 208 which the SEC has proposed to synonymous with clearinghouses because, at least in the US, the big exchanges own their own 'captive clearinghouses,' so most exchange-traded derivatives are also cleared through the exchange's clearinghouse. But they are two separate functions entirely." Exchanges vs. Clearinghouses, ECONOMICS OF CONTEMPr, (April 14, 2010, 4:36 PM), http://economicsofcontempt .blogspot.com/2010/04/exchanges-vs-clearinghouses-this-is.html. 205 7 U.S.C.A. § 2; 15 U.S.C.A. § 78c-3. 206 7 U.S.C.A. § 2; 15 U.S.C.A. § 78c-3. 207 7 U.S.C.A. 2; 15 U.S.C.A. § 78c-3. 208 7 U.S.C.A. § 2; 15 U.S.C.A. § 78c-3. In July, CFTC finalized its rulemaking on the end-user exemption and plans on implementing. 2013] SUBSTANCE VS. FORM 227 exercise 2 0 9 and which the CFTC has exercised and finalized 2 1 0 in their respective rulemakings. The second prong of the exception requires that the swaps transaction at issue be used to hedge or mitigate commercial risk and not for "a purpose that is in the nature of speculation, investing or trading." 2 1 1 The general idea is that the swaps transaction must be economically appropriate to the reduction of a commercial risk or have already qualified for hedging purposes under other relevant law.21 2 Moreover, it cannot be used "to hedge or mitigate the risk of another swap or securitybased swap position, unless that other position itself is used to hedge or mitigate commercial risk." 2 1 3 The CFTC, which has finalized its rulemaking provisions with regard to the criteria of this second prong, 2 14 has emphasized that such determination be on a transaction-by-transaction basis, taking into account all the relevant facts and circumstances that exist when the transaction takes place, and will be "based on the underlying activity to which the risk relates, not on the type of entity claiming the end-user exception." 2 1 5 209 End-User Exception to Mandatory Clearing of Security-Based Swaps, Release No. 3463556; File No. S7-43-10, SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION 5-6 (December 5, 2010) (proposed addition to 17 C.F.R. § 240), available at http://www.sec.gov/rules/proposed/2010/ 34-63556.pdf ("[T]he Commission is proposing Rule 3Cg-1 under the Exchange Act to specify requirements for using the exception to mandatory clearing of security-based swaps established by Exchange Act Section 3C(g), together with proposed alternative language to provide an exemption for small banks, savings associations, farm credit system institutions and credit unions."). 210 End-User Exception to the ClearingRequirementfr Swaps, Federal Register, 77 Fed. Reg. 42,560, 42,578 (July 19, 2012) (to be codified at 17 C.F.R. pt. 39), available at http://www.cftc .gov/ucm/groups/public@lrfederalregister/documents/file/2012-17291a.pdf ("the Commission is adopting § 39.6(d) to provide an exemption from the definition of 'financial entity' for small Section 2(h)(7)(C)(ii) institutions."). 211 See COMMODITY FuTUREs TRADING COMM'N, supra note 187, at 3. 212 End-User Exception to the ClearingRequirementfr Swaps, supra note 210 ("[T]he Commission and the CFTC recently proposed a definition of'hedging or mitigating commercial risk' under proposed Exchange Act Rule 3a67-4 that the Commission preliminarily believes should also govern the meaning of 'hedging or mitigating commercial risk . 213 See id 214 Id. As of the date of this Note, the SEC has not yet finalized its rulemaking provisions with regard to the criteria for "hedging or mitigating commercial risk." 215 Id. Specifically, a swaps transaction subject to CFTC jurisdiction may qualify for treatment as hedging or mitigating commercial risk for purposes of the end-user exception if it: Is economically appropriate to the reduction of risks in the conduct and management of a commercial enterprise . .. Qualies as bonafide hedging for purposes of an exemption from position limits under the Act; or CARDOZO PUB. LAW POLICY &rETHICS J 228 [Vol. 12:183 If the end-user is an issuer of securities registered under the Securities Act or reporting under the Exchange Act, Dodd-Frank requires that it first obtain approval from its board or committee for its decision to rely on the exception.2 1 6 Even if an eligible counterparty relies on the exception, it must still disclose to the appropriate regulator relevant information regarding the swaps transactions, including information on how it plans to meet certain financial obligations. 2 17 In particular, if an end-user relies on this exception while executing a swaps trade, it must notify the appropriate regulator through a swap data repository (hereinafter "SDR").2 18 If no SDR is available, the swap must be reported directly to the regulator.2 1 9 The CFTC's finalized rules require a "check-the-box" reporting format for each swap in which the exception is invoked, asking the reporting counterparty to provide notice of the election and the identity of the electing counterparty. 220 It also allows end-users to comply with most of the reporting requirements through a single annual filing that will compile basic information about the entity, its basis for relying on the exception, and how it plans on meeting its financial obligations.22 1 In many cases, the end-user will not be the reporting party, except in swaps transactions with other end-users.22 2 Qualifies for hedging treatment ... Id. (emphases added). For purposes of brevity, this Note will, where applicable, focus on the "economically appropriate" subcategory. The criteria used to satisfy each of these three subcategories could easily be the subject of another separate and lengthy discussion. As consulting and advisory firm Deloitte points out, this last subcategory of hedging or mitigating commercial risk encompasses a broader scope of transactions than those envisioned under bona fide hedging (which, for example has limits on the tenor for anticipatory hedges) or under [hedge accounting treatment] (which has strict criteria in the assessment of the degree of offset as being 'highly effective' and limits what types of risks may be identified and designated as being hedged)." Thus, while the first two criteria have more clearly defined parameters, there are more "gray areas that may warrant consideration in the application of the 'economically appropriate' test. An interpretationofthe 'hedge or mitigate risk' criteriaand the impact to compliance with the DoddFrank Act, DELOITTE, available at http://deloitte.wsj.com/riskandcompliance/files/2013/05/ Dodd-FrankHedgeMitigate.pdf. 216 7 U.S.C.A. § 2; 15 U.S.C.A. § 78c-3. 217 218 219 220 221 222 2012). 7 U.S.C.A. § 2; 15 U.S.C.A. § 78m-1 (West 2010). 7 U.S.C.A. § 2; 15 U.S.C.A. § 78m-1. 7 U.S.C.A. § 2; 15 U.S.C.A. § 78m-1. See End-User Exception to the Clearing Requirementfor Swaps, supra note 210. Id "Swap Data Recordkeeping and Reporting Requirements." 17 C.F.R. § 45 (January 13, 2013] SUBSTANCE VS. FORM B. 229 Critique Use of derivatives is a double-edged sword. They are a tool of financial ingenuity to help offset commercial risk and allow businesses to operate more efficiently. Derivates can also wreak havoc on a macroeconomic level without proper oversight. If we accept the general premise of Dodd-Frank - that transparency of the swaps market is fundamental in mitigating systemic risk, and that the clearing, exchange trading, and reporting requirements of market dealers and participants are necessary mechanisms to increase transparency - then the scope of the end-user exception is an exceedingly important consideration wrought with many consequences. Its precision must be neither overly underinclusive, in that entities whose swaps transactions pose little to no systemic risk are unduly burdened, nor so overinclusive as to allow entities that are not (but should be) captured by Title VII's mandates but for the end-user exception. Any honest evaluation of the exception's utility must thus bear in mind the overall goals of Dodd-Frank, particularly the prevention and mitigation of systemic risk. i. To the extent that an end-user is neither a SD nor MSP, it should be allowed to avail itself of the exception, irrespective of its financial or non-financial nature. In order to qualify for the exception, the end-user cannot be a financial entity, which for purposes of the exception is defined as a SD, MSP, a commodity pool, a private fund, an employee benefit plan, or a "person predominantly engaged in activities that are in the business of banking, or in activities that are financial in nature,"2 2 3 unless, in the case of a transaction between a financial and non-financial counterparty, the non-financial counterparty elects to use the end-user clearing exception.22 4 Otherwise, the financial counterparty is required to clear any swap subject to the clearing mandate. Interestingly, because neither the definition of SDs nor MSPs differentiates between financial and non-financial entities, the exception leaves open the possibility that non-financial SDs or MSPs could be categorically disqualified from availing themselves of the exception. When certain lawmakers urged regulators to exempt certain end-users such as airlines, manufacturers, and other non-financial entities from 223 7 U.S.C.A. § 2; 15 U.S.C.A. § 78c-3. 224 Id 230 CARD OZO PUB. LAW POLICY 6r ETHICSJ [Vol. 12:183 Title VII's requirements, chairman of the CFTC Gary Gensler testified before the House Financial Services Committee that the CFTC's rules would "focus only on transactions between financial entities," and clarified that the rules would not apply to non-financial entities, or so-called end users, that use derivatives to hedge financial and other commercial risks. 225 Conversely, the exception also leaves open the possibility that a financial entity that is neither a SD nor MSP may be nonetheless disallowed from availing itself of the exception because it is engaged in banking "or in activities that are financial in nature." 2 2 6 While the Act does not take a bright line approach to defining SDs or MSPs, 2 2 7 to some degree it accounts for a firm's level of interconnectedness and the quality of its swaps exposures, two important factors in systemic risk as discussed in Part II. In particular, the definition of MSPs captures any entity that "maintains a substantial position in swaps for any of the major swap categories as determined by the [CFTC]" or "whose outstanding swaps create substantial counterparty exposure that could have serious adverse effects on the financial stability" of the U.S. 2 2 8 Thus, in light of the fact that non-financial entities may also propagate systemic risk,229 it would be inappropriate to allow a nonfinancial entity that is otherwise highly interconnected and whose exposures are substantial enough to cause adverse effects on the broader economy to qualify as an end-user and bypass Title VII's mandates. On the other hand, it would make little sense to disallow a financial firm whose swaps exposures are not otherwise substantial enough to cause systemic risk from availing itself of the exception. For example, consider non-financial entities that are heavily involved in the energy derivatives market. Large energy and utility companies have extensively lobbied Congress and the CFTC to adopt rules most favorable to its industry.2 30 In 2009, the top five dealers in the energy derivatives market were large banks: Morgan Stanley, Barclays 225 Benn Protess, Republicans Push for Exemptions to Derivatives Rules, N.Y. TIMES (Feb. 15, 2011), http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2011/02/15/republicans-push-for-exemptions-to-deriva tives-rules/. 226 7 USCA § 2; 15 USCA § 78c-3. 227 See supra Part III. 228 7 USCA § la. 229 See supra Part II. 230 Ben Protess, Regulators to Ease a Rule on Derivatives Dealers, N.Y. TIMES (Apr. 12, 2012), http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2012/04/17/regulators-to-ease-a-rule-on-derivatives-dealers/. 2013]1 SUBSTANCE VS. FORM 231 Capital, Deutsche Bank, Socidtd G6n6rale, Goldman Sachs. 2 3 1 But two large energy and utility companies - BP and Shell Energy, respectively occupied the sixth and seventh spots. 2 32 While these entities certainly use energy derivatives to help hedge commodity price volatility, it does not always explain their simultaneous usage of derivatives for operations not directly related to risk management and indistinguishable from "classic financial house non-commercial derivatives dealing and prop trading." 2 3 3 As one critic aptly states: The average man-on-the-street thinks of Shell as a company with gas stations, refineries, storage tanks and oil wells. It is. But that's not the whole picture.... The average Wall Street investment banker running an energy derivatives trading desk also thinks of Shell Energy as one of its biggest competitors, dealing derivatives and running a proprietary trading business.2 34 Indeed, the energy and utility companies' lobbying efforts had been so vigorous that it prompted Gary S. Gensler, the current chairman of the CFTC, to dub it "the BP loophole." 2 3 5 Thus, to the extent that a non-financial entity such as BP is just as much as a SD or MSP in the swaps market as a financial entity such as Goldman Sachs, it would be a seemingly absurd result to allow the former to bypass Title VII's mandates while requiring the latter's adherence. ii. Even assuming that financial institutions are somehow inherently systemically riskier than non-financial institutions (while controlling for interconnectedness and quality of exposures), the logic of the end-user exception is internally inconsistent In the CFTC's finalized rulemaking provision, it exercised its authority under section 4(c) of the Commodities Exchange Act, which 231 J. Parsons & A. Mello, When is an end-user not an end-user?, BETTING THE BusINESS (Feb., 17, 2011), http://bettingthebusiness.com/2011/02/17/when-is-an-end-user-not-an-enduser/. 232 233 Id Id. 234 Merrill Goozner, Business Groups Seek Swaps Exemption, FiscAL TIMES (Apr. 1, 2011), http://www.thefiscaltimes.com/Articles/2011/04/01/Business-Groups-Seek-Swaps-Exemption .aspx#pagel. 235 Silla Brush & Robert Schmidt, How the Bank Lobby Loosened U.S. Reins on Derivatives, BLOOMBERG (Sept. 4, 2013), http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-09-04/how-the-banklobby-loosened-u-s-reins-on-derivatives.html. CARDOZO PUB. LAW POLICY & ETHICS 232 V 12:183 [Vol. grants the CFTC general exemptive authority,236 to permit qualifying cooperatives to elect to use the end-user exception.2 37 Cooperatives may elect the exception provided that its members are either non-financial entities or other cooperatives whose members are non-financial entities, and that the swap is entered into in connection with originating loans to cooperative members or with hedging or mitigating commercial risk related to loans to, or swaps with, members.2 3 8 Cooperatives are businesses owned and run by and for their members, such as credit unions and Farm Credit System (hereinafter "FCS") lenders. 2 3 9 The CFTC's rationale for exempting cooperatives from the definition of financial entity is that "the relationship between a cooperative and its members . . . is different from the relationship between banks and their customers" in that "they exist to serve their members' interests and act as intermediaries for their members in the marketplace. "240 On the other hand, banks generally are for-profit, publicly or privately held corporations whose investor-owners are not required to be the users of the bank's services, and often are not.. . . As such, unlike the member-focused purposes of exempt cooperatives, a primary purpose of banks is to generate value for their owners, who generally are not their customers. 2 4 1 In a public comments letter to the CFTC after its preliminary rulemaking on this topic, the Independent Community Bankers of America pointed out the logical inconsistency in treating cooperatives differently from community banks, in that they both serve the same functions in serving customers. 2 4 2 "Community banks, for example, ac236 7 U.S.C. § 6(c)(1). Clearing Exemption for Certain Swaps Entered into by Cooperatives, COMMODITIES FuTuREs TRADING COMM'N 5, http://www.cftc.gov/ucm/groups/publicl@newsroom/documents/ 237 file/federalregister081313.pdf. 238 239 Id See What is a Cooperative?, COOPERATIVE CTR. FED. CREDIT UNION, available at http:// www.coopfcu.org/about-us/what-is-a-cooperative.html (last accessed Nov. 30, 2013). 240 241 ClearingExemption for Certain Swaps Entered into by Cooperatives, supra note 237 Id at 15. 242 See Letter from Mark Scanlan, Senior V. Pres., Agriculture and Rural Policy, Indep. Cmty. Bankers of America, to David Stawick, Sec'y of the Comm'n, Commodity Futures Trading Comm'n (Aug. 16, 2012), http://www.icba.org/files/ICBASites/PDFs/ICBA%20Comments %20RIN%20%23%203038-AD47-ClearingO/o20Exemption%20for%20Cooperatives%20816 12%20_2_.pdf. 2013] SUBSTANCE VS. FORM 233 cumulate deposits, transfer money and help manage maturities and risks of various loans and financial products on behalf of their customers who would not be able to accomplish the same tasks on an individual basis." 24 3 Additionally, community banks' "use of swaps also 'pose less risk to the financial system' and use swaps to hedge the underlying risks of loans made to their customers, in the same or similar manner as do FCS lenders and credit unions." 2 4 4 The exception also specifically includes pension plans in the list of institutions that qualify as financial and thus ineligible for availing itself of the exception. 2 45 "Swaps are commonly used for pension plan management" because "[t]hey help manage risk, reduce portfolio volatility, facilitate plan transition among investment managers and minimize transaction costs associated with rebalancing portfolios." 246 Categorically disqualifying pension plans from end-user status is ill contrived because they are not interconnected with the broader economy in any sense meaningful for assessing systemic risk. As the Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan, the largest single-professional pension plan in Canada, explained in a letter to the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision: It is important to emphasize that pension funds are end-users of OTC derivatives. Dealers, banks and other intermediaries, by their nature, are exposed to both the OTC derivatives transaction entered into with a client and a corresponding hedge, often in the form of one or more other OTC derivatives. An intermediary's role in the market gives rise to the problem of interconnected cross-defaulting, the hallmark of systemic risk. By contrast, end-user pension funds are exposed to only the credit risk of their counterparty in any given transaction. In addition, pension assets are held separately from the pension sponsor's assets and generally from the assets of its custodian. . . . Bilateral arrangements do not give rise to the problem of interconnected crossdefaults, and therefore do not contribute to the element of systemic risk caused by such interconnectedness and pension funds' assets are isolated from the insolvency of sponsors and custodians.2 47 243 244 245 246 Id. at 3. Id at 4. 7 U.S.C.A. 5 2; 15 U.S.C.A. § 78c-3. Oaten & Sichel, supra note 144. 247 Letter to the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, ONTARIO TEACHERS' PENSION PLAN 3 (Sept. 28, 2012), http://www.bis.org/publ/bcbs226/otpp.pdf. See also, Are Pension Funds too Important to Fail? Or too Big to Save?, NETSPAR 18 (Dec. 2011), available at http:// arno.uvt.nl/show.cgi?fid=121904 ("One difference to start with is that the banking sector is 234 CARDOZO PUB. LAW POLICY & ETHICS [ 12:183 [Vol. Additionally, because pension plans are typically subject to "comprehensive prudential regulatory regimes spanning from governance to investment concentration restrictions, "248 the quality of its exposures is generally not a concern. Thus, even if we accept that financial entities are somehow inherently systemically riskier than non-financial entities, the internal logic of the end-user exception with respect to financial entities such as cooperatives and pension plans makes little sense. iii. Any end-user exception must always be formulated against the backdrop of Dodd-Frank's goals of preventing and mitigating systemic risk Dodd-Frank comes a long way in overhauling an entirely OTC derivatives market. It recognizes any realistic and economically appropriate reform must ultimately balance the costs of regulatory compliance against the goals of preventing and mitigating systemic risk. As discussed in Part II, a firm's systemic risk profile is largely characterized by factors such as its interconnectedness with other institutions and the broader economy as well as the quality of its exposures and the levels of risks it assumes by making certain investments. However, these factors are not inherently limited to financial institutions, and the end-user exception should reflect that. Additionally, to the extent that the criteria for SDs and MSPs already accounts for the qualities typically associated with systemic risk, such as high levels of interconnectedness and risky counterparty exposures, whether the business of a given entity is primarily financial or non-financial in nature should be of no import. By revisiting (or finalizing its rulemaking with regard to, in the case of the SEC) the end-user exception with a focus on substance over form, federal regulators may help not only ensure fairness but also prevent regulatory arbitrage. globally interconnected and is part of the global financial system. In contrast, pension funds are only users of the financial system. They do not bring products into the financial market that are traded there. They use the financial market to invest their assets and try to profit from these investments."). 248 Letter to the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, supra note 247, at 3.