Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 124.djvu/1681

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124 STAT. 1655 PUBLIC LAW 111–203—JULY 21, 2010 (1) STUDY.—The Commodity Futures Trading Commission, in consultation with each entity that is a designated contract market under the Commodity Exchange Act, shall conduct a study of the effects (if any) of the position limits imposed pursuant to the other provisions of this title on excessive specu- lation and on the movement of transactions from exchanges in the United States to trading venues outside the United States. (2) REPORT TO THE CONGRESS.—Within 12 months after the imposition of position limits pursuant to the other provi- sions of this title, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, in consultation with each entity that is a designated contract market under the Commodity Exchange Act, shall submit to the Congress a report on the matters described in paragraph (1). (3) REQUIRED HEARING.—Within 30 legislative days after the submission to the Congress of the report described in para- graph (2), the Committee on Agriculture of the House of Rep- resentatives shall hold a hearing examining the findings of the report. (4) BIENNIAL REPORTING.—In addition to the study required in paragraph (1), the Chairman of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission shall prepare and submit to the Congress biennial reports on the growth or decline of the derivatives markets in the United States and abroad, which shall include assessments of the causes of any such growth or decline, the effectiveness of regulatory regimes in managing systemic risk, a comparison of the costs of compliance at the time of the report for market participants subject to regulation by the United States with the costs of compliance in December 2008 for the market participants, and the quality of the available data. In preparing the report, the Chairman shall solicit the views of, consult with, and address the concerns raised by, market participants, regulators, legislators, and other interested parties. (b) STUDY ON FEASIBILITY OF REQUIRING USE OF STANDARDIZED ALGORITHMIC DESCRIPTIONS FOR FINANCIAL DERIVATIVES.— (1) IN GENERAL.—The Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission shall conduct a joint study of the feasibility of requiring the derivatives industry to adopt standardized computer-readable algorithmic descriptions which may be used to describe complex and standardized financial derivatives. (2) GOALS.—The algorithmic descriptions defined in the study shall be designed to facilitate computerized analysis of individual derivative contracts and to calculate net exposures to complex derivatives. The algorithmic descriptions shall be optimized for simultaneous use by— (A) commercial users and traders of derivatives; (B) derivative clearing houses, exchanges and elec- tronic trading platforms; (C) trade repositories and regulator investigations of market activities; and (D) systemic risk regulators. The study will also examine the extent to which the algorithmic description, together with standardized and extensible legal Deadline.