SEC, CFTC Seek Public Comment on the Harmonization of Portfolio Margining Frameworks
The Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission issued a joint request for public comment on potential approaches to further harmonize the regulatory frameworks that apply to portfolio.
At a glance
- The SEC and CFTC jointly sought public comment on harmonizing portfolio margining frameworks, per the SEC's June 26, 2026 release.
- The CFTC issued a corresponding press release on the same date.
VERDICT — CONFIRMED
The Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission issued a joint request for public comment on potential approaches to further harmonize the regulatory frameworks that apply to portfolio margining across securities and related markets, per the SEC's June 26 announcement. The CFTC published a companion release the same day, numbered 9262-26 on its press page.
Portfolio margining allows margin requirements to be computed on the net risk of a portfolio spanning related products rather than position by position — an area where the split between SEC and CFTC jurisdiction over securities and derivatives has long produced separate rule sets.
A request for comment is an information-gathering step rather than a rule proposal, and both agencies framed the exercise as seeking public input on potential approaches, per the releases. The comment deadline, the specific questions posed and any harmonization options under consideration were not carried in the feed and remain unverified here.
Background
The bifurcation at issue dates to 1974, when Congress created the CFTC to regulate futures while leaving securities with the SEC — a division that gives economically similar products different regulators, different clearing regimes and different margin rules. A trader hedging equities with index futures, or Treasury securities with Treasury futures, typically must post margin in two silos that do not fully recognize the offsetting risk, tying up more collateral than a unified net-risk calculation would require.
Regulators have chipped at the divide before: portfolio margining for customer equity and options accounts was permitted in the mid-2000s, cross-margining arrangements exist between clearinghouses for some products, and the Dodd-Frank Act directed the agencies to consider comparability in swaps regulation. Industry groups have pressed for fuller harmonization for years, arguing that fragmented margining inflates collateral costs and, in stress episodes, can amplify liquidity strains — arguments that gained force as clearing volumes and Treasury market intermediation grew.
What comes next
The procedural path runs from comment period to, potentially, coordinated rule proposals — a step neither agency has committed to, per the releases. Watch for the comment deadline and the specific questions posed in the Federal Register version of the request, which will indicate which harmonization options the agencies consider live, and for responses from clearinghouses, dealers and buy-side groups whose collateral costs are at stake.
Key facts on file
- The SEC and CFTC jointly sought public comment on harmonizing portfolio margining frameworks, per the SEC's June 26, 2026 release.
- The CFTC issued a corresponding press release on the same date.
