The Commission has brought a number of actions seeking to protect whistleblowers. One action, for example, was brought against a firm which tried to bar former employees from talking to regulators by inserting provisions in its severance clauses while retaliating against a whistleblower. In the Matter of SandRidge Energy, Inc., Adm. Proc. File No. 3-17739 (December 20, 2016). Another centered on similar allegations about restrictions in severance clauses but also included allegations that the firm delayed legal fee payments under an indemnification agreement for the attorney representing a former executive who had received whistleblower information and declined to state if his client was a whistleblower, citing at one point Exchange Act Section 21F. In the Matter of HomeStreet, Inc., Adm. Proc. File No. 3-17801 (January 19, 2017).

None of the Commission’s actions to date have centered solely on allegations that it was improper for an executive who was named in a whistleblower report to conduct an inquiry about that report. That is the focus of the actions recently taken in the U.K. by the Financial Conduct Authority or FCA and the Prudential Regulation Authority or PRA. Together the two regulators imposed a fine of £642,430 on James Stanley, Chief Executive of Barclays Group. Special requirements were also imposed on the bank.

The action stems from an anonymous letter received by Barclays in June 2016. The letter claimed to be from a shareholder of the bank. Some of the allegations in it concerned Mr. Stanley. This, the FCA and PRA concluded, constituted a conflict for Mr. Stanley in view of which he “should have maintained an appropriate distance.” In fact he did not. To the contrary Mr. Stanley took steps to try and identify the author.

Continuing to conduct an investigation in the face of a conflict was a breach of the requirement to act with integrity, the regulators concluded. In view of the conflict Mr. Stanley should have realized that he “needed to take particular care to maintain an appropriate distance from Group Compliance’s investigation,” according to the two U.K. regulators. There was a risk, under the circumstances, that Mr. Stanley would not be able to exercise impartial judgment. Once the Group Compliance investigation commenced, it was important that it maintain control over the inquiry.

This is the first case brought under the Senior Managers Regime. The inquiry concluded that Mr. Stanley made “serious errors of judgment.” Accordingly, the penalty imposed was 10% of his relevant annual income. The fine does consider that Mr. Stanley settled at an early stage. He was also censured.

The two regulators also expressed “some concerns about the firm’s whistleblowing systems and controls and have concluded that these require enhanced monitoring and scrutiny” stemming from Mr. Stanley’s actions. In view of those concerns, Barclays is being required to report any whistleblowing allegations made against senior managers as well as those where the bank has tried to identify the whistleblower. Each year under the Senior Managers Regime officials will have to attest to the soundness of the whistleblowers systems. This will continue until 2020.

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The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform Act strengthened the jurisdiction and enforcement capabilities of the CFTC in a number of respects. Once key provision concerned Retail Commodity Contracts, under CEA Section 2(c)((2)(D). It provides that the CFTC shall have jurisdiction over commodity transactions “entered into, or offered (even if not entered into), on a leveraged or margined basis, or financed by the offeror, the counterparty, or a person acting in concert with the offeror or counterparty on a similar basis.” Once exception is where there is delivery within 28 days.

A second key addition is Section 6(c)(1), an antifraud provision which provides that it “shall be unlawful for any person, directly or indirectly, to use or employ, or attempt to use or employ, in connection with any swap, or a contract of sale of any commodity in interstate commerce, or for future delivery . . . any manipulative or deceptive device or contrivance, in contravention of such rule and regulations as the Commission shall promulgate.” The CFTC adopted Rule 180.1 which generally tracks the language of the statute.

Each of these provisions was critical to the recent decision in CFTC v. Monex Credit Company, Civil Action No. 8:17-cv-01868 (C.D.Cal. May 1, 2018). There the court rejected the position of the CFTC as to each provision. The court’s interpretation of antifraud section 6(c)(1) is also at odds with a recent decision of another district court, according to the decision.

Monex

The CFTC brought an enforcement action against Monex and others based in part on the two provisions cited above. The case was before the court on the defendants’ motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6), F. R Civ. and the agency’s motion for a preliminary injunction. The former was granted, the latter denied.

Monex offers retail customers two types of transactions, according to the complaint. The first is retail transactions in which the customer pays full price for precious metals. This type of transaction is not at issue here.

The second is what the firm called its Atlas program. There Monex offers precious metals on a leveraged, margined, or financed basis. Retail customers can purchase precious metals by paying a portion of the purchase price and financing the balance under the program. Customers with trading accounts can open positions with Monex acting as the counterparty and setting the price in each transaction. If the transaction is “on leverage” or “on margin,” Monex provides the financing. A deposit is required as margin. In this situation Monex retaines complete control – it sets the margin and can liquidate the account for failure to meet the requirements of the program.

Under the terms of the customer agreement Monex retains control of the metals traded in the Atlas program. The customer does not take actual physical delivery. Rather, the metal is maintained in a depository subject to an agreement Monex has with the depository. The customer only obtains physical possession of the metal on full payment or if they ask for actual delivery. Otherwise the customer holds a long position. The CFTC complaint claims that the customers do not have actual position but just a book entry which is a sham. The agency alleged prohibited off-exchange transactions and fraud.

In resolving the motion to dismiss the court first turned to section 2(c)(2)(D). The parties disagreed regarding the impact of the delivery exception on the provision. The CFTC argued that since it is an exception, the Defendants had the burden of establishing it applies here. The Defendants disagreed, claiming that it is an exclusion requiring the CFTC to prove that it does not apply here. The court declined to resolve the question.

Rather, the court focused on the meaning of the term delivery. The decision in CFTC v. Hunter Wise Commodities, LLC, 749 F. 3d 967 (11th Cir. 2014) is the only case to have focused on the meaning of that term. There the court defined delivery in terms of a transfer of possession and control. The court’s holding did not require, however, that the buyer take actual physical control of the commodity. The court also found that the defendant in the action did not have sufficient supplies available to cover its margin accounts. Since it had nothing to deliver, there was no deliver.

In this case Defendants clamed that there was delivery within the meaning of prior CFTC interpretations which have not required actual physical delivery to meet the requirement. Rather, a number of factors have been considered such as ownership, possession, title and the physical location of the commodity purchased or sold. Here Monex claimed is agreements fall within these requirements.

The CFTC rejected this claim, contending that the conduct here is a sham. That contention was based primarily on the fact that the customer positions can be liquidated at any time without notice. The agency also cited to provisions in the agreements which give Monex complete control.

The court rejected the CFTC’s interpretation based largely on its reading of the statutes. The points cited by the CFTC focus on the Monex business model, the court noted. The statutory provisions involved “apply to covered retail commodity transactions, which must be entered into or offered on a leveraged or margin basis, or financed by the offeror. . . If this conduct alone negated “actual delivery,” every financed transaction would violate Dodd-Frank. . . The Court can conceive of no plausible leveraged retail transaction of fungible commodities that would not involve at least some of the same alleged practices. Thus, if the Court were to adopt the CFTC’s construction, the result would be to eliminate the Actual Delivery Exception from the CEA.” (internal citations omitted).

Second, the court turned to the application of the antifraud section, 6(c)(1). Initially, the court rejected Defendants’ claim that the actual delivery exception negated the application of the statute here. To the contrary, the plain language of the sections provides the CFTC with jurisdiction over covered retail commodity transactions to enforce the antifraud sections.

The court then turned to the construction of the statute. Monex argued that the section only applies to particular commodity transactions that are manipulative in the derivatives market. In contrast, the CFTC claimed that section 6(c)(1) applies to retail commodities transactions with or without market manipulation.

Initially, the court focused on the language of the section which it acknowledged is broad. That language prohibits “manipulation” and makes it unlawful in connection with any swap, or a contract of sale of any commodity — “any manipulative or deceptive device or contrivance. . .” is prohibited. The legislative history is consistent with this reading of the statute. That history reveals that the section was designed to ease the burned of proving manipulation for the CFTC by reducing the “specific intent” element to one of recklessness. This followed the approach used by the SEC in manipulation cases. Viewed in this context, the court concluded that “the CEA unambiguously forecloses the application of Section 6(c)(1) in the absence of actual or potential market manipulation. While this conclusion appears to be inconsistent with CFTC v. McDonnell, 287 F. Supp. 3d 213, 226-27, 229-30 (E.D.N.Y. 2018) the main focus of that decision was whether the CFTC could regulate virtual currencies as a commodity,” the court stated.

Comment.

The decision here is significant. Section 2(c)(2)(D) regarding Retail Commodity Transactions broadened the jurisdiction of the CFTC. Under this section the agency argued here that arrangements such as those used by Monex are in fact trading that should be on a regulated exchange and thus violate the statute. Yet if in fact delivery within the time limit, there is an exception, which the court noted.

The court’s construction of CEA Section 6(c)(1) clearly delimits its reach. While the court focused on the language of the section, the result seems driven more by its reading of the legislative history. In view of the language of the section, which is also the predicate for the ruling in McDonnell, and the Supreme Court’s focus on statutory language to the exclusion of history (here), should be considered when evaluating this determination. Nevertheless, the decision represents two significant losses for the CFTC.

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