Title 7 › Chapter CHAPTER 1— - COMMODITY EXCHANGES › § 6
It is illegal for anyone to do business in the United States to solicit or take orders for a futures contract unless three things happen: the trade is done on a contract market or derivatives trading facility the Commission has approved, the trade is executed through that contract market, and there is a written record showing the date, the parties and their addresses, the commodity, the price, and delivery terms. Members must keep those records for three years (or longer if the Commission says so) and let the Commission or the Department of Justice inspect them. The Commission can exempt people or transactions under certain rules. The Commission can make rules requiring foreign exchanges that let U.S. persons trade directly to register and follow standards. Before allowing direct access, the Commission will check whether the foreign exchange is regulated in its home country. If a foreign exchange settles against prices of contracts listed on a registered U.S. market, the Commission will allow direct access only if the foreign exchange publishes daily trading data like the U.S. market, has similar position limits and the power to force position cuts to stop manipulation or excessive speculation, agrees to tell the Commission quickly about changes, and provides large-trader and aggregate position information. Boards given direct access before July 21, 2010 were not immediately subject to these rules until 180 days after that date. The Commission may also set rules for U.S. persons who offer foreign-exchange contracts about fraud, financial standards, reporting, recordkeeping, protecting customer funds, and registration. To promote innovation, the Commission can exempt certain contracts or people, but only if the deal is between qualified “appropriate persons” (for example, banks, insurance companies, registered investment companies, commodity pools, large businesses with net worth over $1,000,000 or assets over $5,000,000, employee plans with over $1,000,000 or managed by qualified managers, government entities, broker‑dealers, futures firms, or others the Commission approves) and the exemption is in the public interest. Applicants can ask to keep some material secret if it is a trade secret or would cause competitive harm. Some special exemptions apply after October 28, 1992 and as of October 23, 1974 for certain swaps. Granting an exemption does not stop the Commission from investigating or enforcing the law. A person registered with, or exempted by, the Commission will not be treated as breaking the rules for trading on a foreign exchange if they reasonably believe the foreign board is legally organized, authorized by its regulator, and is regulated, and the Commission has not found it to be operating in violation.
Full Legal Text
Agriculture — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
7 U.S.C. § 6
Title 7 — Agriculture
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73