So, here I was, once again, embarking down a new section of highway, twisting and unwinding, far from where I started. It passed through that intersection of law, markets, and technology that consistently remained the course of my career. And soon I would feel the powerful tailwinds of the Internet of Value and see the dawning rays of cryptocurrencies.
Notes
1 1. eSecurities, Trading and Regulation on the Internet (American Lawyer Media, Published September 1998 - January 2003).
2 2. He is suspected by some to be the alter ego of the celebrated British recording artist Mike Marlin. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mike_Marlin
3 3. “The Great Recession was made possible by the mobilization of most of the governments and associated banks of East and West in a mad rush to pump money into securitized mortgages on the margins of the middle class and below. Inequality in a top-heavy, slow growing economy inspired a drive to substitute credit for real income and wealth. The result was a huge overhang of debt in the middle class and a swelling of assets at the top.” George Gilder, The Scandal of Money: Why Wall Street Recovers but the Economy Does Not (Washington, DC: Regnery Publishing, 2016), 90–91.
4 4. See, www.wmbaa.org
5 5. Micah Green had previously served as president and co-CEO of the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association (SIFMA), which was formed by a merger between The Bond Market Association and the Securities Industry Association. Today, he is a partner in the distinguished law firm of Steptoe & Johnson.
6 6. Many restaurants use the “Delmonico's” name. The original and, I believe, the best is at 56 Beaver Street in lower Manhattan where it has been since the nineteenth century. That restaurant introduced the concept of fine dining to America and is said to have created such dishes as Delmonico steak, Chicken à la King, Eggs Benedict, Lobster Newberg, and Baked Alaska.
Chapter 3 Heading Down the Highway
On a straight but undulating road, you don't concentrate on the next brow, but the one after that, and anything in between you will (or should) have taken account of long before you reach it.
—Michael Costin (auto racing engineer), describing the racing state of mind, Trackrod Motor Club Newsletter, Dec. 1973
The Layout
The US government formed administrative agencies to regulate commercial activity in the late 1800s, with the creation of the Interstate Commerce Commission. Applying powers delegated by Congress, these agencies publish rules and regulations; determine whether laws, rules, or regulations have been broken in particular cases; and impose fines and other sanctions on transgressors.
To perform these functions, Congress has conferred upon these agencies both quasi-legislative and quasi-judicial powers. They can issue licenses, set rates, and shape or even outlaw business practices.
Some agencies are federal executive departments, like, say, the Department of Transportation or Department of Agriculture. Other agencies exist outside the executive departments. The latter are referred to as independent agencies, because they report to both legislative and executive branches of government and the president's power to dismiss the agency head or its commissioners is limited. This independent structure insulates the agency from the political winds that sweep over Washington. The best-known independent agencies are probably the Federal Reserve Board, the Federal Communications Commission, the Federal Trade Commission, and the CFTC's sister agency, the Securities and Exchange Commission.
The Commodity Futures Trading Commission is another independent agency. Though less well known, it is of critical importance to the stability and prosperity of global financial markets. It was established in 1974 on the initiative of some visionary leaders of the Chicago commodity futures exchanges. The new agency assumed responsibility for regulating commodity futures markets—a role that, from the 1920s1 until then, had been performed by the Department of Agriculture. The CFTC operates under the statutory framework of the Commodity Exchange Act (CEA),2 a law that was originally passed in 1936 but has been amended several times since.
The CFTC is composed of five commissioners who serve staggered five-year terms. They are chosen by the president and confirmed by the Senate. No more than three of the five commissioners can be of the same political party. The commission is a creation of Congress, which has delegated power to it. The delegation is necessary because derivatives markets are so large, vast, and ever-changing that close scrutiny is necessary. Congress does not have the time or expertise to exercise daily oversight over them. So it delegated authority to the commission, which the commission is to wield in a fashion shielded from the expediencies of short-sighted politics.
The US derivatives markets—regulated by the CFTC—are the world's largest, most developed, and most influential. They are relatively unmatched in their depth and breadth. They provide deep pools of trading liquidity at low transaction cost and with minimal friction, and facilitate participation by a vast and diverse array of global counterparties. They are also some of the world's fastest growing and technologically innovative markets of any kind.
Price Discovery
US derivatives markets are outstanding at providing efficient and undistorted price discovery. Farmers look at the prices set on agriculture futures exchanges to determine for themselves whether they are getting fair value for the crops they sell to local grain elevators. At the same time, the grain elevators use futures market prices as the basis for what they offer local farmers at harvest. The US Department of Agriculture uses that same information to make price projections, determine volatility measures, and make payouts on crop insurance.
The value of many of the world's most important agricultural, mineral, and energy commodities is reliably established in US futures markets. Importantly, those prices are set in US dollars. Dollar pricing of the world's commodities provides an enormous and unparalleled advantage to American producers in global commerce. Thanks to dollar pricing, neither producers nor consumers in the United States need a currency hedge on top of their commodities hedges.
US derivatives markets are also considered to be some of the world's best regulated. The United States is the only major country in the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development to have a regulatory agency specifically dedicated to derivatives market regulation: the CFTC. There is a connection between singularly focused federal regulation and having the world's most competitive derivatives markets. For over 40 years, the CFTC has been recognized for its principles-based regulatory framework and econometrically driven analysis. The CFTC is respected around the world for its depth of expertise and breadth of capability. Too often underfunded, at times underestimated, certainly underrecognized, the CFTC is unquestionably the most innovation accommodating market regulator in Washington's alphabet soup of agencies. And, oh yes, unlike almost every other federal financial regulator, markets and institutions