🇺🇸 CFTC ·

CFTC adopts FDTA joint data standards for financial regulatory reporting

Regulatory-reporting and data teams at CFTC-reporting firms must migrate to the FDTA common identifiers and machine-readable submission formats as the joint standards take effect

Change
On 8 June 2026, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) adopted a final rule establishing joint data standards under the Financial Data Transparency Act of 2022, setting common identifiers and machine-readable submission formats for data reported to certain US financial regulatory agencies; eight other federal agencies are adopting the same standards.
Why it matters
The joint standards establish common identifiers for entities, geographic locations, dates, and certain products and currencies, plus a principles-based standard for data transmission and schema/taxonomy formats. Because the same standards are being adopted across nine agencies — the CFTC, Federal Reserve, SEC, CFPB, Treasury, FDIC, FHFA, NCUA and OCC — firms that report to more than one of these regulators must re-engineer reporting pipelines to the common identifiers and formats rather than maintaining divergent per-agency formats. The rule is the standards-setting step; specific reporting-format obligations and timelines flow through each agency's individual data collections.
Implications
  • Regulatory-reporting and data-management teams at CFTC-regulated firms must map current submission formats to the FDTA common identifiers (entity, location, date, product, currency) and machine-readable schema/taxonomy requirements, or face rework when agency data collections transition to the joint standards.
  • Firms reporting to multiple of the nine adopting agencies must coordinate a single migration to the common standards across those reporting lines, or carry duplicate divergent-format pipelines the rule is designed to eliminate.
  • Compliance and technology teams must track each agency's implementing data collections, since the joint standards set the common format but the binding reporting-format changes and timelines are applied through each agency's individual rulemaking and collection updates.

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