Title 15 › Chapter CHAPTER 109— - WALL STREET TRANSPARENCY AND ACCOUNTABILITY › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - REGULATION OF OVER-THE-COUNTER SWAPS MARKETS › Part Part A— - Regulatory Authority › § 8302
Before making rules or orders about swaps, the CFTC must talk and try to coordinate with the SEC and the bank regulators so rules are consistent. Before making rules or orders about security-based swaps, the SEC must talk and try to coordinate with the CFTC and the bank regulators. This covers swaps and security-based swaps and the related dealers, big participants, data repositories, clearing groups, associated persons, eligible contract participants, and execution platforms. The rules must follow normal rulemaking steps and be final no later than 360 days after July 21, 2010. The consultation rules do not apply to orders about violations of the Commodity Exchange Act or securities laws, or to certain on-the-record proceedings. Any consultation must follow the Administrative Procedure Act. Each agency must consider the bank regulators’ views. They must treat functionally similar products or firms in a similar way, but they do not have to make identical rules. The CFTC and SEC, with the Board of Governors, must jointly make rules for mixed swaps. Each agency only has authority over its own area: the CFTC does not gain power over security-based swaps, and the SEC does not gain power over swaps. Industry self-regulatory groups may not take over the other agency’s area, except they can examine and enforce capital rules. If one agency thinks the other’s final rule breaks these limits, it can ask the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit to set the rule aside within 60 days. The court must fast-track the case, give no special deference to either agency, and a filed challenge pauses the rule until the court’s final decision. The two agencies, with the Board, must also agree on definitions and on joint rules for records and data, try to make rules comparable, and ask the Financial Stability Oversight Council to resolve joint-rule disputes if needed. Starting July 21, 2010, both agencies may begin preparing rules, studies, registrations, and exemptions to get ready.
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Commerce and Trade — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
15 U.S.C. § 8302
Title 15 — Commerce and Trade
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73