Organized Crime

Jim Grant’s observation on the Commodity Futures Trading Commission:

A less-than-suffocating financial oversight regime is looking looser by the day, as a Monday Barron’s report details the evisceration of Chicago’s enforcement division at the CFTC: “In recent months, the office has become a ghost town,” with a 20-strong team of enforcement attorneys pared to just one. That aggressive downsizing is particularly striking in light of the office’s prominent role in major CFTC enforcement actions since its 1975 establishment, including recent civil charges against Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao and now-jailed FTX boss Sam Bankman-Fried.

“Chicago is the spiritual home of the futures markets; it’s where it all began,” former CFTC staffer David Slovick lamented to Barron’s. “To wipe out the enforcement staff. . . sends a very bad signal to market participants about whether the government is watching what they’re doing and whether or not they have to abide by the law.”

High-Speed Traders Profit at Expense of Ordinary Investors, a Study Says | NYTimes.com

NATHANIEL POPPER and CHRISTOPHER LEONARD write:

The chief economist at the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, Andrei Kirilenko, reports in a coming study that high-frequency traders make an average profit of as much as $5.05 each time they go up against small traders buying and selling one of the most widely used financial contracts [E-mini S&P 500 Futures].

via High-Speed Traders Profit at Expense of Ordinary Investors, a Study Says – NYTimes.com.

CFTC Limits Commodity Speculation

The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) voted 3 to 2 today to limit trading in oil, wheat, gold and other commodities after a boom in raw-materials speculation, record- high prices and years of debate and delay.

The rule limits the number of contracts a single firm can hold and it limits traders to 25 percent of deliverable supply in the month nearest to delivery.

via CFTC Limits Commodity Speculation.