Title 7 › Chapter CHAPTER 1— - COMMODITY EXCHANGES › § 6f
Anyone who wants to work as a futures commission merchant, introducing broker, floor broker, or floor trader must register with the Commission. Applicants must fill out the Commission’s form and give the information it asks for, such as names and addresses of branch managers and key officers or partners. After registering, they must keep giving updated information the Commission asks for. Registrations end on December 31 of the year issued or at another time the Commission sets that is at least one year after issuance. Registrations can be renewed unless suspended or revoked. Brokers or dealers already registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission must register as a futures commission merchant or introducing broker if they only deal in security futures on contract markets and meet a few conditions, including filing a written notice, not being suspended by the SEC, and belonging to a national securities association. Some floor brokers and floor traders who meet similar limits and conditions can be exempt from separate registration. Brokers or dealers that register this way, or floor people who are exempt, are also exempt from many other rules in the chapter, can get more limited exemptions from the Commission, and are not required to join a futures association; associations may not stop members from doing business with them. Futures commission merchants and introducing brokers must meet minimum financial rules the Commission sets and must keep meeting them. If they are members of a contract market or a registered derivatives trading venue that has Commission-approved financial standards, that can count as meeting the minimums. Each registered futures commission merchant must collect and keep records about affiliated companies (those under common control) whose business could hurt the merchant’s finances or operations. The records must describe, in the aggregate, the affiliates’ futures and other financial activities and their usual sources of capital. The Commission may ask for summary reports no more often than quarterly, and may require more detailed reports if it has concerns about a merchant’s condition. When an affiliate is examined by a Federal banking agency, the Commission must consult that agency when making rules and may accept copies of the reports the affiliate files with the bank agency instead of new reports. The Commission cannot force a merchant to turn over bank exam reports, and information received from a Federal banking agency cannot be shared without that agency’s written permission. The Commission may grant exemptions from these rules after considering factors like other regulators’ oversight and the affiliate’s business.
Full Legal Text
Agriculture — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
7 U.S.C. § 6f
Title 7 — Agriculture
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73