The International Swaps and Derivatives Association (ISDA) has outlined a set of principles designed to help achieve the widely held goal of a more harmonized framework of international derivatives regulations.

The principles, which incorporate views expressed by international regulators and market participants, are intended to guide the development of frameworks and processes for inter-jurisdictional recognition of derivatives regulation through a principles-based substituted compliance methodology.

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In its Methodology for Regulatory Comparisons, ISDA suggests the following principles:

An effective framework should be grounded in the declarations issued by the G?20 following the Pittsburgh and Cannes meetings.

The five G-20 goals are the basis of derivatives regulatory reform and should be met through regional or national efforts of sufficient consistency to avoid fragmenting global markets. These goals include: clearing of standardized derivatives; exchange/electronic trading, where appropriate; reporting to trade repositories; higher capital requirements for non-cleared trades; and margin requirements for non-cleared trades.

In order to minimize burdens on regulators, maintain global markets and avoid market fragmentation, regional and national regulators should evaluate the other’s regimes to allow for a principles-based approach to cross-border compliance.

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For purposes of substitute compliance or equivalence, comparisons of one jurisdiction’s requirements to another’s may use a variety of analytical methods, all of which must start with identification of a set of common principles that elaborate on the G-20 regulatory goals.

Ultimate decisions regarding comparability require not only a bilateral dialogue between regulators, but also a transparent process.

Regulators should consult and cooperate with each other before implementing their derivatives regulations.

ISDA welcomes the recent initiative by IOSCO in this area and the announcement of their Task Force on Cross-Border Regulation. ISDA believes that IOSCO can play a vital role in facilitating bilateral or multi-lateral inter-jurisdictional recognition efforts which will greatly help markets to progress to a consistent international framework that avoids duplication or jurisdictional over-reach.

"ISDA undertook the development and implementation of these principles for developing substituted compliance methodology to further the goal that we believe everyone shares: a coherent, effective and harmonized international regulatory framework," said Stephen O’Connor, ISDA Chairman. "Inter-jurisdictional recognition of and consistency in derivatives regulation is essential in building safe and efficient financial markets."

To illustrate the proposed methodology, ISDA also published examples of how the principles will apply to various areas within derivatives regulation. These examples have been developed and organized in relation to three of the five primary goals of derivatives regulation issued by the G-20.