Derivatives, Legislative and Regulatory Weekly Update (March 28, 2025)

Client Alert  |  March 28, 2025


From the Derivatives Practice Group: The FIA has published updated versions of the FIA Uniform Futures and Options on Futures Risk Disclosures Booklet and FIA Template Disclosures Regarding Separate Accounts to account for the CFTC’s changes to the 1.25 Rule and the Separate Accounts Rule.

New Developments

  • ICE and Circle Sign MOU to Explore Product Innovation Based on Circle’s USDC and USYC Digital Assets. On March 27, Intercontinental Exchange Inc. (“ICE”), a leading global provider of technology and data, and Circle Internet Group, Inc. (“Circle”), a global financial technology company and stablecoin market leader, today announced an agreement whereby ICE plans to explore using Circle’s stablecoin USDC, as well as tokenized money market offering US Yield Coin (“USYC”), to develop new products and solutions for its customers. Under the MoU, Circle and ICE plan to collaborate to explore applications for using Circle’s stablecoins and other product offerings within ICE’s derivatives exchanges, clearinghouses, data services, and other markets, to deliver innovation and build new markets and product offerings based on Circle’s products. [NEW]
  • Updated FIA Disclosures For New CFTC Rules. On March 24, the FIA announced that is has published updated versions of the FIA Uniform Futures and Options on Futures Risk Disclosures Booklet and FIA Template Disclosures Regarding Separate Accounts for new CFTC rules. Both documents are available in the “Regulatory Disclosures” section of FIA’s US Documentation Library. The CFTC approved new rules in December revising the list of permitted investments for Futures Commissions Merchants (“FCMs”) and DCOs in CFTC Regulation 1.25 (“1.25 Rule”) and codifying no-action relief governing treatment of separate accounts (“Separate Accounts Rule”). The 1.25 Rule requires FCMs and Introducing Brokers to use a revised form of the 1.55 risk disclosure statement for customers onboarded on or after March 31, 2025. The revised disclosure statement reflects the scope of permissible investments, as modified by the 1.25 Rule. The FIA Uniform Futures and Options on Futures Risk Disclosures Booklet is intended to assist FCMs in delivering mandatory customer disclosures under CFTC, exchange and Self-Regulatory Organization rules. Among the disclosures contained in the booklet is the FIA Combined Risk Disclosure Statement. That document has been updated in accordance with the 1.25 Rule to reflect the modified list of permissible investments. [NEW]
  • CFTC Staff Issues Interpretation Regarding Financial Reporting Requirements for Japanese Nonbank Swap Dealers. On March 20, the CFTC’s Market Participants Division issued an interpretation concerning financial reporting obligations for nonbank swap dealers subject to regulation by the Financial Services Agency of Japan (“Japanese nonbank SDs”). On July 18, 2024, the CFTC issued a comparability determination and related comparability order granting substituted compliance in connection with the CFTC’s capital and financial reporting requirements to Japanese nonbank SDs, subject to certain conditions in the order (“Japanese Comparability Order”). One of the conditions in the Japanese Comparability Order, condition 9, requires each Japanese nonbank SD to file a copy of its home regulator Annual Business Report with the CFTC and the National Futures Association (NFA). The staff interpretation clarifies that Japanese nonbank SDs may satisfy condition 9 of the Japanese Comparability Order by filing with the CFTC and the NFA certain enumerated schedules of the Annual Business Report (In Scope Schedules), subject to the translation, U.S. dollar conversion, and deadline requirements of condition 9. The interpretation was issued in response to a request from the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association on behalf of its Japanese nonbank SD members that rely on the Japanese Comparability Order.
  • SEC’s Division of Corporation Finance Releases Statement on Certain Proof-of-Work Mining Activities. On March 20, the SEC’s Division of Corporation Finance (“Corp Fin”) released a statement providing its views on certain activities on proof-of-work networks known as “mining.” Specifically, the statement addressed the mining of crypto assets that are intrinsically linked to the programmatic functioning of a public, permissionless network, and are used to participate in and/or earned for participating in such network’s consensus mechanism or otherwise used to maintain and/or earned for maintaining the technological operation and security of such network. Corp Fin said that participants in “Mining Activities” (as defined in the statement) do not need to register transactions with the SEC under the Securities Act or fall within one of the Securities Act’s exemptions from registration in connection with these Mining Activities. Commissioner Crenshaw released a related statement, noting that Corp Fin’s statement delivers “neither progress nor clarity” and suffers from issues of flawed logic and limited and imprecise application. Commissioner Crenshaw said that Corp Fin’s statement “leaves us exactly where we started,” because it does not obviate the need for a facts and circumstances application under the investment contract test set forth in SEC v. W.J. Howey Co., 328 U.S. 293 (1946).
  • CFTC’s Office of Customer Education and Outreach Releases New Advisory on Fraud Using Generative AI. On March 19, the CFTC’s Office of Customer Education and Outreach (the “OCEO”) released a customer advisory that says generative artificial intelligence is making it increasingly easier for fraudsters to create convincing scams. The OCEO advisory describes how fraudsters use AI to create fraudulent identifications with phony photos and videos that can appear very real if one is not familiar with the advances of AI technology. The fraudsters also are using AI to forge government or financial documents. An FBI public service announcement also warns the public about how criminals are using AI to commit fraud and how the technology is being used in relationship investment scams.
  • CFTC Staff Withdraws Advisory on Swap Execution Facility Registration Requirement. On March 13, the CFTC Division of Market Oversight (“DMO”) announced it is withdrawing CFTC Letter No. 21-19, Staff Advisory Swap Execution Facility (“SEF”) Registration Requirement, effective immediately. As stated in the withdrawal letter, DMO determined to withdraw the advisory since it has created uncertainty regarding whether certain entities are required to register as SEFs.

New Developments Outside the U.S.

  • ESMA Makes Recommendations for the Supervision of STS Securitizations. On March 27, ESMA published its Peer Review Report on National Competent Authorities’ (“NCAs”) supervision of Simple, Transparent and Standardized (“STS”) securitizations. The Report looks into and provides recommendations on the supervisory approaches adopted by selected NCAs when supervising STS securitization transactions and the activities of their originators, sponsors and securitization special purpose entities. The Peer Review focused on the NCAs of France, Germany, Portugal, and the Netherlands. [NEW]
  • ESMA Extends the Tiering and Recognition of the Three UK-Based CCPs. On March 17, ESMA announced its decision to temporarily extend the application of the recognition decisions under Article 25 of the European Market Infrastructure Regulation (“EMIR”) for three central counterparties (“CCPs”) established in the United Kingdom (“UK”). On January 30, 2025, the European Commission adopted a new equivalence decision in respect of the regulatory framework applicable to CCPs in the UK. Subsequently, ESMA has prolonged the tiering determination decisions and recognition decisions for the three recognized UK CCPs – ICE Clear Europe Ltd, LCH Ltd (as Tier 2) and LME Clear Ltd (as Tier 1) – that were adopted by ESMA on September 25, 2020, to align with the expiry date of the new equivalence decision. The application of the tiering determination decisions and recognition decisions is temporarily extended until 30 June 2028.
  • ESMA and Bank of England Conclude a Revised MoU in Respect of UK-Based CCPs Under EMIR. On March 17, ESMA and the Bank of England (“BoE”) signed a revised Memorandum of Understanding (“MoU”) on cooperation and information exchange concerning the three CCPs established in the UK (ICE Clear Europe Ltd, LCH Ltd and LME Clear Ltd) which have been recognized by ESMA under EMIR. ESMA said that, according to EMIR, one of the conditions for recognition of a third-country CCP (TC-CCP) by ESMA is the establishment of cooperation arrangements between ESMA and the relevant third-country authority. ESMA noted that the revised MoU follows the amendments introduced by EMIR 3 on the requirements concerning the content of such cooperation arrangements, in particular, cooperation in respect of systemically important TC-CCPs (Tier 2 TC-CCPs), and replaces the earlier version that ESMA and the BoE concluded in 2020.
  • UK Drops Proposals to Publicize Enforcement Investigations if Public Interest Test is Met. On March 11, the UK Financial Conduct Authority (“FCA”) wrote to the Treasury Select Committee and House of Lords Financial Services Regulation Committee about its proposals to increase the transparency of enforcement investigations. The FCA indicated that, given continued industry concern over its proposals to publicize an investigation into a regulated firm carrying out authorized activity, where a public interest test is met, the FCA will not proceed with this. Instead, it will stick to its existing exceptional circumstances test to determine if it should publicize investigations into regulated firms. The FCA noted that it will take forward the following proposals and aim to publish a policy statement in the first half of this year: (i) Reactively confirming investigations announced by others; (ii) Public notifications that focus on the potentially unlawful activities of unregulated firms and regulated firms operating outside the regulatory perimeter; and (iii) Publishing greater detail of issues under investigation on an anonymous basis. ISDA said that the FCA’s proposal, which would have given it the ability to publicly name firms at the start of an investigation, caused concern across the industry. In their February 17 response to the proposal, ISDA and the Association for Financial Markets in Europe (“AFME”) highlighted concerns that the proposals would be harmful to UK competitiveness and growth and suggested a broader interpretation of the existing exceptional circumstances test could be used to meet the FCA’s objectives. This was the second consultation ISDA and AFME responded to on this subject. The first response, submitted on April 30, 2024, is available here.
  • ESMA Clarifies the Treatment of Settlement Fails with Respect to the CSDR Penalty Mechanism. On March 14, ESMA published a statement on the treatment of settlement fails with respect to the Central Securities Depositories Regulation (“CSDR”) penalty mechanism, following the major incident that affected TARGET Services (T2S and T2) last month. ESMA clarifies in the statement that National Competent Authorities (“NCAs”) do not expect Central Securities Depositories to apply cash penalties in relation to settlement failures for the days of February 27 and 28, 2025. As specified in an existing CSDR Q&A, cash penalties should not be applied in situations where settlement cannot be performed for reasons that are independent from the involved participants.

New Industry-Led Developments

  • IOSCO Launches New Alerts Portal to Help Combat Retail Investment Fraud. On March 20, IOSCO announced the launch of the International Securities & Commodities Alerts Network (“I-SCAN”). IOSCO said that I-SCAN is a unique global warning system where any investor, online platform provider, bank or institution can check if a suspicious activity has been flagged for a particular company by financial regulators, which will submit alerts directly to I-SCAN, worldwide. According to IOSCO, I-SCAN forms part of IOSCO’s Roadmap for Retail Investor Online Safety, an initiative which was launched in November last year.

The following Gibson Dunn attorneys assisted in preparing this update: Jeffrey Steiner, Adam Lapidus, Marc Aaron Takagaki, Hayden McGovern, and Karin Thrasher.

Gibson Dunn’s lawyers are available to assist in addressing any questions you may have regarding these developments. Please contact the Gibson Dunn lawyer with whom you usually work, any member of the firm’s Derivatives practice group, or the following practice leaders and authors:

Jeffrey L. Steiner, Washington, D.C. (202.887.3632, jsteiner@gibsondunn.com)

Michael D. Bopp, Washington, D.C. (202.955.8256, mbopp@gibsondunn.com)

Michelle M. Kirschner, London (+44 (0)20 7071.4212, mkirschner@gibsondunn.com)

Darius Mehraban, New York (212.351.2428, dmehraban@gibsondunn.com)

Jason J. Cabral, New York (212.351.6267, jcabral@gibsondunn.com)

Adam Lapidus, New York (212.351.3869,  alapidus@gibsondunn.com )

Stephanie L. Brooker, Washington, D.C. (202.887.3502, sbrooker@gibsondunn.com)

William R. Hallatt, Hong Kong (+852 2214 3836, whallatt@gibsondunn.com )

David P. Burns, Washington, D.C. (202.887.3786, dburns@gibsondunn.com)

Marc Aaron Takagaki, New York (212.351.4028, mtakagaki@gibsondunn.com )

Hayden K. McGovern, Dallas (214.698.3142, hmcgovern@gibsondunn.com)

Karin Thrasher, Washington, D.C. (202.887.3712, kthrasher@gibsondunn.com)

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