Title 7 › Chapter 1— COMMODITY EXCHANGES › § 6f
People who want to register as a futures commission merchant, introducing broker, floor broker, or floor trader must apply to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission in the form it requires. The application must give basic business information, like branch managers and company officers, and registrants must keep the Commission updated. Registrations expire on December 31 of the year issued or at another date the Commission sets that is at least one year from issuance, and must be renewed unless suspended or revoked. Brokers or dealers already registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission who limit their futures work to security futures products and who file the required notice, are not suspended by the SEC, and belong to a national securities association, must register as a futures commission merchant or introducing broker. Some floor brokers and floor traders who meet similar SEC and activity limits are exempt from registration. Those who register under these rules, or who are exempt, may also be exempt from many other specific rules in the chapter, can get additional exemptions from the Commission, and do not have to join a futures association; futures associations cannot stop members from dealing with them. Each registered futures commission merchant must keep records and information about how it watches and controls financial and operational risks from its affiliated companies (not natural persons). The records must describe the kinds of business and usual funding sources of affiliates that could materially affect the merchant’s net capital, liquidity, or operations. The Commission may ask for summary reports no more frequently than quarterly and may require more detailed reports if it has concerns from market events or earlier filings. When affiliates are examined by a Federal banking agency, the Commission will consult that agency when making rules and may accept reports those affiliates already file with the banking agency instead of new ones. Before asking a bank agency for affiliate information, the Commission must notify and consult the agency unless delay would be harmful. The Commission may not force a merchant to produce bank examination reports or supervisory analyses, and it cannot share information obtained from a Federal banking agency without that agency’s written approval. The Commission may grant exemptions from these rules after considering factors like where the information is available, the affiliate’s main business, and how much of the merchant’s activity involves U.S. futures markets. The Commission’s other authorities under the chapter remain in effect.
Full Legal Text
Agriculture — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
7 U.S.C. § 6f
Title 7 — Agriculture
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60