CFTC guidance within weeks; U.S. crypto perpetual futures could follow
Public signals from Chair Mike Selig indicate the U.S. derivatives regulator is preparing to publish guidance for crypto perpetual futures within weeks, a step that could bring these contracts back onshore after years of primarily offshore trading, as reported by Blockonomi. The near-term focus is framed as guidance on structure and compliance rather than a final rule, suggesting a phased path where exchanges and clearing organizations adapt operations under supervisory expectations.
Selig’s remarks have referenced enabling “true perpetual” contracts under safeguards and across both centralized and decentralized venues, according to KuCoin News. While specifics remain pending, the direction implies risk-based conditions that align perpetual futures with existing U.S. market integrity standards while recognizing 24/7 trading and crypto-specific market structure.
What CFTC guidance will require for U.S. perpetual futures
Early readouts point to operational requirements that mirror core U.S. derivatives standards, registration of trading venues, clearing via derivatives clearing organizations, robust market surveillance, margin and collateral governance, disclosures tailored to perpetual funding mechanics, and continuous oversight, consistent with priorities flagged in legal analysis published by JDSupra. The agency’s approach is expected to emphasize transparency around funding rates, liquidation mechanics, and the governance of oracle and index data used to settle perpetual contracts.
A key pathway under discussion is the use of exemptive authority, sometimes framed as “innovation exemptions”, to permit perpetual futures without waiting for new statutes, according to Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP. In parallel, industry commentary has emphasized calibrating obligations to product risks rather than recreating the most burdensome rulesets from traditional commodities markets; as one industry voice put it, the goal is “minimum effective regulation,” said the Futures Industry Association.
Exemptive relief and onshoring: access, leverage, and risk controls
Exemptive relief could be paired with staged market access. Initial listings may prioritize professional or qualified participants while the agency evaluates whether retail access warrants additional guardrails such as tighter leverage caps, standardized risk disclosures, and enhanced suitability checks. Any retail pathway, if contemplated, would likely hinge on venue-level controls and clear disclosures about funding payments, liquidation thresholds, and 24/7 price gaps.
Onshoring is also expected to reshape leverage and risk controls versus offshore norms. U.S.-supervised venues would be positioned to implement pre-trade risk checks, margin floors aligned to observed volatility, circuit breakers or pauses during extreme moves, and orderly liquidation protocols, with coordinated workflows across exchanges, clearinghouses, futures commission merchants, and custodians. Readiness for around-the-clock surveillance and incident response remains a core operational question, as noted by Sidley in its policy updates.
At the time of this writing, the figures indicate Bitcoin (BTC) near $68,607 with a 14-day RSI of 47.53, volatility around 5.12% (high), 12 green days out of the past 30 (40%), and moving averages at roughly $77,542 (50-day) and $97,055 (200-day). These context metrics are descriptive and do not imply direction; they underscore that any launch of U.S.-regulated perpetuals would likely be paired with margin and disclosure standards responsive to market conditions.
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