STATEMENT OF ADMINISTRATION POLICY
H. R. 2289 – Commodity End-User Relief Act
(Rep. Conaway, R-TX, and three cosponsors)
The Administration is firmly committed to
strengthening the Nation's financial system through the implementation
of key reforms to safeguard derivatives markets and ensure a stronger
and fairer financial system for investors and consumers. The full
benefit to the Nation's citizens and the economy cannot be realized
unless the entities charged with establishing and enforcing the rules of
the road have the resources to do so.
The Administration strongly opposes the
passage of H.R. 2289 because it undermines the efficient functioning of
the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) by imposing a number of
organizational and procedural changes and would undercut efforts taken
by the CFTC over the last year to address end-user concerns. H.R. 2289
also offers no solution to address the persistent inadequacy of the
agency's funding. The CFTC is one of only two Federal financial
regulators funded through annual discretionary appropriations, and the
funding the Congress has provided for it over the past five years has
failed to keep pace with the increasing complexity of the Nation's
financial markets. The changes proposed in H.R. 2289 would hinder the
ability of the CFTC to operate effectively, thereby threatening the
financial security of the middle class by encouraging the same kind of
risky, irresponsible behavior that led to the great recession.
Prior to enactment of the Dodd-Frank Wall
Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, the derivatives markets were
largely unregulated. Losses connected to derivatives rippled through
that hidden network, playing a central role in the financial crisis.
Wall Street Reform resulted in significant expansion of the CFTC's
responsibilities, establishing a framework for standardized
over-the-counter derivatives to be traded on regulated platforms and
centrally cleared, and for data to be reported to repositories to
increase transparency and price discovery. The changes proposed in H.R.
2289 would hinder the CFTC's progress in successfully implementing
these critical responsibilities and would unnecessarily disrupt the
effective management and operation of the agency without providing the
more robust and reliable funding that the agency needs.
In order to respond quickly to market
events and market participants, the CFTC needs funding commensurate with
its evolving oversight framework. The Administration looks forward to
working with the Congress to authorize fee funding for the CFTC as
proposed in the FY 2016 Budget request, a shift that would directly
reduce the deficit. User fees were first proposed in the President’s
Budget by the Reagan Administration more than 30 years ago and have been
supported by every Democratic and Republican Administration since that
time. Fee funding would shift CFTC costs from the general taxpayer to
the primary beneficiaries of the CFTC’s oversight in a manner that
maintains the efficiency, competitiveness, and financial integrity of
the Nation’s futures, options, and swaps markets, and supports market
access for smaller market participants hedging or mitigating commercial
or agricultural risk.
If the President were presented with H.R. 2289, his senior advisors would recommend that he veto the bill.
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