[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 17, Volume 1]
[Revised as of April 1, 2007]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 17CFR150.5]

[Page 567-569]
 
              TITLE 17--COMMODITY AND SECURITIES EXCHANGES
 
             CHAPTER I--COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION
 
PART 150_LIMITS ON POSITIONS--Table of Contents
 
Sec.  150.5  Exchange-set speculative position limits.

    (a) Exchange limits. Each contract market as a condition of 
designation under part 5, appendix A, of this chapter shall be bylaw, 
rule, regulation, or resolution limit the maximum number of contracts a 
person may hold or control, separately or in combination, net long or 
net short, for the purchase or sale of a commodity for future delivery 
or, on a futures-equivalent basis, options thereon. This section shall 
not apply to a contract market for which position limits are set forth 
in Sec.  150.2 of this part or for a futures or option contract market 
on a major foreign currency, for which there is no legal impediment to 
delivery and for which there exists a highly liquid cash market. Nothing 
in this section shall be construed to prohibit a contract market from 
fixing different and separate position limits for different types of 
futures contracts based on the same commodity, or from fixing different 
position limits for different futures or for different delivery months, 
or from exempting positions which are normally known in the trade as 
``spreads, straddles, or arbitrage,'' of from fixing limits which apply 
to such positions which are different from limits fixed for other 
positions.
    (b) Levels at designation. At the time of its initial designation, a 
contract market must provide for speculative position limit levels as 
follows:
    (1) For physical delivery contracts, the spot month limit level must 
be no greater than one-quarter of the estimated spot month deliverable 
supply, calculated separately for each month to be listed, and for cash 
settled contracts, the spot month limit level must be no greater than 
necessary to minimize the potential for manipulation or distortion of 
the contract's or the underlying commodity's price;
    (2) Individual nonspot or all-months-combined levels must be no 
greater than 1,000 contracts for tangible commodities other than energy 
products;
    (3) Individual nonspot or all-months-combined levels must be no 
greater than 5,000 contracts for energy products and nontangible 
commodities, including contracts on financial products.
    (c) Adjustments to levels. Contract markets may adjust their 
speculative limit levels as follows:
    (1) For physical delivery contracts, the spot month limit level must 
be no greater than one-quarter of the estimated spot month deliverable 
supply, calculated separately for each month to be listed, and for cash 
settled contracts, the spot month limit level must be no greater than 
necessary to minimize the potential for manipulation or distortion of 
the contract's or the underlying commodity's price; and
    (2) Individual nonspot or all-months-combined levels must be no 
greater than 10% of the average combined futures and delta-adjusted 
option month-end open interest for the most recent calendar year up to 
25,000 contracts with a marginal increase of 2.5% thereafter or be based 
on position sizes customarily held by speculative traders on the 
contract market, which shall not be extraordinarily large relative to 
total open positions in the contract, the breadth and liquidity of the 
cash market underlying each delivery

[[Page 568]]

month and the opportunity for arbitrage between the futures market and 
the cash market in the commodity underlying the futures contract.
    (d) Hedge exemption. (1) No exchange bylaw, rule, regulation, or 
resolution adopted pursuant to this section shall apply to bona fide 
hedging positions as defined by a contract market in accordance with 
Sec.  1.3(z)(1) of this chapter. Provided, however, that the contract 
market may limit bona fide hedging positions or any other positions 
which have been exempted pursuant to paragraph (e) of this section which 
it determines are not in accord with sound commercial practices or 
exceed an amount which may be established and liquidated in an orderly 
fashion.
    (2) Traders must apply to the contract market for exemption from its 
speculative position limit rules. In considering whether to grant such 
an application for exemption, contract markets must take into account 
the factors contained in paragraph (d)(1) of this section.
    (e) Trader accountability exemption. Twelve months after a contract 
market's initial listing for trading or at any time thereafter, contract 
markets may submit for Commission approval under section 5a(a)(12) of 
the Act and Sec.  1.41(b) of this chapter a bylaw, rule, regulation, or 
resolution, substituting for the position limits required under 
paragraphs (a), (b) and (c) of this section an exchange rule requiring 
traders to be accountable for large positions as follows:
    (1) For futures and option contracts on a financial instrument or 
product having an average open interest of 50,000 contracts and an 
average daily trading volume of 100,000 contracts and a very highly 
liquid cash market, an exchange bylaw, regulation or resolution 
requiring traders to provide information about their position upon 
request by the exchange;
    (2) For futures and option contracts on a financial instrument or 
product or on an intangible commodity having an average moth-end open 
interest of 50,000 and an average daily volume of 25,000 contracts and a 
highly liquid cash market, an exchange bylaw, regulation or resolution 
requiring traders to provide information about their position upon 
request by the exchange and to consent to halt increasing further a 
trader's positions if so ordered by the exchange;
    (3) For futures and option contracts on a tangible commodity, 
including but not limited to metals, energy products, or international 
soft agricultural products, having an average month-end open interest of 
50,000 contracts and an average daily volume of 5,000 contracts and a 
liquid cash market, an exchange bylaw, regulation or resolution 
requiring traders to provide information about their position upon 
request by the exchange and to consent to halt increasing further a 
trader's positions if so ordered by the exchange, provided, however, 
such contract markets are not exempt from the requirement of paragraphs 
(b) or (c) that they adopt an exchange bylaw, regulation or resolution 
setting a spot month speculative position limit with a level no grater 
than one quarter of the estimated spot month deliverable supply;
    (4) For purposes of this paragraph, trading volume and open interest 
shall be calculated by combining the month-end futures and its related 
option contract, on a delta-adjusted basis, for all months listed during 
the most recent calendar year.
    (f) Other exemptions. Exchange speculative position limits adopted 
pursuant to this section shall not apply to any position acquired in 
good faith prior to the effective date of any bylaw, rule, regulation, 
or resolution which specifies such limit or to a person that is 
registered as a futures commission merchant or as a floor broker under 
authority of the Act except to the extent that transactions made by such 
person are made on behalf of or for the account or benefit of such 
person. In addition to the express exemptions specified in this section, 
a contract market may propose such other exemptions from the 
requirements of this section consistent with the purposes of this 
section and shall submit such rules Commission review under section 
5a(1)(12) of the Act and Sec.  1.41(b) of this chapter.
    (g) Aggregation. In determining whether any person has exceeded the 
limits established under this section, all positions in accounts for 
which such

[[Page 569]]

person by power of attorney or otherwise directly or indirectly controls 
trading shall be included with the positions held by such person; such 
limits upon positions shall apply to positions held by two or more 
person acting pursuant to an express or implied agreement or 
understanding, the same as if the positions were held by a single 
person.

[64 FR 24048, May 5, 1999]