Title 7 › Chapter CHAPTER 1— - COMMODITY EXCHANGES › § 7
A board of trade that wants to be a contract market must apply to the Commission and give any records or materials the Commission requires. A board of trade that was already a designated contract market on December 21, 2000, is treated as a designated contract market. To get and keep the designation, the board must follow the core rules in this law and any extra rules the Commission makes, though it usually may choose how to meet those core rules. The board must write, watch, and enforce market rules, including who may trade, what contracts say, and bans on abusive trading. It must be able to spot, investigate, and punish rule breakers and to get the information it needs, including sharing information across borders if required. The board may list only contracts that are not easy to manipulate. It must work to stop manipulation, price distortion, and delivery or settlement problems by watching trading in real time and keeping accurate trade records. The board must set position limits or monitoring for speculators and follow any Commission limits. It must have emergency powers to liquidate or move positions, pause trading, or require special margins. The board must publish clear contract terms, execution rules, platform specs, and daily data like settlement prices, volume, open interest, and opening and closing ranges. It must protect the financial integrity of trades and intermediaries, guard customer funds, run fair markets, keep records for at least 5 years in a form the Commission accepts, run risk controls and disaster plans, test backups, have enough money and staff (enough funds to cover one year of operating costs), and use fair governance, conflict rules, discipline, dispute resolution, fitness standards, and diversity efforts. Records for certain swaps must be open to the SEC. Finally, agricultural futures listed on a contract market as of December 21, 2000, may only trade on a designated contract market unless the Commission allows trading on a derivatives transaction execution facility after notice, comment, and a hearing.
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Agriculture — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
7 U.S.C. § 7
Title 7 — Agriculture
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73