Credit Ratings Factsheet
Credit Ratings Factsheet
Credit Ratings Factsheet
On July 21, 2010, the Congress passed the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act. Among other things, the Dodd-Frank Act requires Federal agencies to:
Review their regulations that require the use of a credit-worthiness assessment of a security or money market
instrument;
Remove any reference to or reliance on credit ratings in those regulations and substitute an appropriate standard of
credit-worthiness;
Work to develop uniform standards of credit-worthiness; and
Report to Congress after the completion of the rulemaking process.
The Commission has completed the required review of its regulations, and the Proposal removes
the following references and substitutes them with these standards:
CFTC Regulation 1.49 - Denomination of Customer Funds and Location of Depositories, Qualifications for
Depositories: We are proposing to remove the clause in this regulation that previously allowed the placement of customer
funds in foreign depositories that issued highly rated commercial paper or long term debt instruments. We propose to rely on
the standard that customer funds be placed only in foreign depositories that have in excess of $1 billion of regulatory capital.
CFTC Regulation 4.24 - Commodity Pool Operators and Commodity Trading Advisors – General Disclosures
Required; Investment Program and Use of Proceeds: We are proposing to remove the reference to “investment rating”
in this regulation and substitute it with phrase “credit-worthiness.”
The Proposal notes other references to credit ratings that are removed or amended in other
concurrent Commission Proposals:
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), the Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve (FRB) and other regulators.