Title 7 › Chapter 1— COMMODITY EXCHANGES › § 6
The law says you cannot offer, take, or handle orders for commodity futures in the United States unless the trades run on a contract market the Commission has approved, the deal is done through that market, and there is a written record showing date, parties, addresses, what was bought or sold, the price, and delivery terms. Members of those markets must keep that record for three years and let representatives of the Commission or the Department of Justice inspect it. The Commission can make rules for foreign exchanges that let U.S. people trade in their electronic systems. It will look at whether the foreign exchange is properly regulated at home. The Commission can only allow direct U.S. access to foreign trades that settle against prices of U.S.-registered contracts if the foreign exchange provides comparable daily trading data, similar position limits and powers to reduce positions to stop manipulation or excessive speculation, and timely notices and large-trader information the Commission needs. Boards that had U.S. direct access before July 21, 2010 had an extra 180 days. The Commission can also require registration, anti-fraud rules, financial standards, records, and customer protections for U.S. persons dealing in foreign-board contracts, and it can grant limited exemptions after notice and hearing if it serves the public interest and the deal is only between certain qualified parties (for example, banks, insurers, regulated investment companies, commodity pools, entities with net worth over $1,000,000 or assets over $5,000,000, government bodies, broker-dealers, futures firms, and similar qualified persons). While an exemption request is pending, the Commission may keep trade-secret or competitively harmful information private. Granting an exemption does not stop the Commission from investigating or enforcing the rules. A registered or exempt person who reasonably believes a contract is on a foreign exchange that is legally organized, authorized, and regulated will not be treated as breaking the basic rule unless the Commission has found otherwise.
Full Legal Text
Agriculture — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
7 U.S.C. § 6
Title 7 — Agriculture
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60