Subject: SR-OCC-2024-001 34-99393
From: Louie Romanes
Affiliation:

Feb. 7, 2024

Dear Sir/Madame, 



Thank you for the opportunity to comment 
on SR-OCC-2024-001 34-99393 entitled 
"Proposed Rule Change by The Options 
Clearing Corporation Concerning lts 
Process for Adjusting Certain Parameters 
in Its Proprietary System for Calculating 
Margin Requirements During Periods 
When the Products It Clears and the 
Markets It Serves Experience High 
Volatility" 
I have several concerns about the OCC 

rule proposal, HIGHLY OPPOSE THIS 
PROPOSAL, AND DO NOT SUPPORT IT'S 
APPROVAL!. 
I'm concerned about the lack of 
transparency in our financial system as 
evidenced by this rule proposal, amongst 
others. The details of this proposal along 
with supporting information are 
significantly redacted which prevents 
public review making it impossible for the 
public to meaningfully review and 
comment on this proposal, and this 
proposal should be rejected on that basis 
alone. 
These rules create an unfair marketplace 
for market participants, especially retail 
investors, who are forced to face the 
consequences of long-tail risks while the 

OCC repeatedly waives margin calls for 
Clearing Members by repeatedly reducing 
their margin requirements. For this 
reason, this rule proposal should be 
rejected and Clearing Members should be 
subject to strictly defined margin 
requirements as other investors are. 
Per the OCC, this rule proposal and these 
special margin reduction procedures exist 
because a single Clearing Member 
defaulting could result in a cascade of 
Clearing Member defaults potentially 
exposing the OCC to financial risk. Thus, 
Clearing Members who fail to properly 
manage their portfolio risk against long 
tail events become de facto Too Big To 
Fail. 



For this reason, this rule proposal should 
be rejected and Clearing Members should 
face the consequences of failing to 
properly manage their portfolio risk, 
including against long tail events. 
Clearing Member failure is a natural 
disincentive against excessive leverage 
and insufficient capitalization as others in 
the market will not cover their loss. 
This rule proposal codifies an inherent 
conflict of interest for the Financial Risk 
Management (FRM) Officer. While the 
FRM Officer's position is allegedly to 
protect OCC's interests, the situation 
outlined by the OCC proposal where a 
Clearing Member failure exposes the OCC 
to financial risk necessarily requires the 
FRM Officer to protect the Clearing 
Member from failure to protect the OCC. 

Unfortunately, rubber stamping margin 
requirement reductions for Clearing 
Members at risk of failure vitiates the 
protection from market risks associated 
with Clearing Member's positions provided 
by the margin collateral that would have 
been collected by the OCC. For this 
reason, this rule proposal should be 
rejected and the OCC should enforce 
sufficient margin requirements to protect 
the OCC and minimize the size of any 
bailouts that may already be required. 
As the OCC's Clearing Member Default 
Rules and Procedures Loss Allocation 
waterfall allocates losses to "3. OCC's own 
pre-funded financial resources" (OCC's 
"skin-in-the-game" per SR-OCC-2021-801 
34-91491 [10]) before "4. Clearing fund 
deposits of non-defaulting firms", any 

sufficiently large Clearing Member default 
which exhausts both "1. The margin 
deposits of the suspended firm" and "2. 
Clearing fund deposits of the suspended 
firm" automatically poses a financial risk 
to the OCC. 
As this rule proposal is concerned with 
potential liquidity issues for non-defaulting 
Clearing Members as a result of charges 
to the Clearing Fund, it is clear that the 
OCC is concerned about risk which 
exhausts OCC's own pre-funded financial 
resources. With the first and foremost line 
of protection for the OCC being "1. The 
margin deposits of the suspended firm" 
this rule proposal is blatantly illogical and nonsensical. 

If this rule proposal is approved, 
mitigating the procyclical margin 
requirements directly reduces the first line 
of protection for the OcC, margin 
collateral from at risk Clearing Member(s), 
so this rule proposal should be rejected, 
made fully available for public review, and 
approved only with significant 
amendments to address the issues raised 
herein. 
In light of the issues outlined above 
please consider the following 
modifications: 
Increase and enforce margin requirements 
commensurate with risks associated with 
Clearing Member positions instead of 
reducing margin requirements. Clearing 
Members should be encouraged to 

position their portfolios to account for 
stressed market conditions and long-tail 
risks. This rule proposal currently 
encourages Clearing Members to become 
Too Big To Fail in order to pressure the 
OCC with excessive risk and leverage into 
implementing idiosyncratic controls more 
often to privatize profits and socialize losses. 


Respectfully, 


Louie Romanes 
Retail Investor 
louieromanes@yahoo.com 







































































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