The CFTC and SEC have launched a joint public comment process on the definition of derivative products, adding up-to-date regulatory weight to a debate that could shape the treatment of cryptocurrency futures contracts in the United States.
TL;DR
- The agencies are seeking comments on the definitions in Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Act.
- The move comes as approvals for perpetual futures contracts come under legal scrutiny.
- The comment window is expected to remain busy for 60 days after publication in the Federal Register.
- The outcome could impact which venues will be able to offer cryptocurrency derivatives and under what settlement rules.
Derivatives definitions are back in focus
The Joint Proposal is not a cryptocurrency-only document, but the timing makes it highly relevant for digital asset markets. Futures contracts are in an awkward position for U.S. regulators because the product resembles a futures contract in trading behavior, but some critics say the economic design may overlap with swap-style exposure. This distinction is not academic. It affects settlements, margins, venue approvals and the competitive landscape between customary futures exchanges and newer cryptocurrency platforms.
CFTC Chairman Michael Selig said the proposal provides an opportunity to clarify ambiguities in Title VII of Dodd-Frank that limit competition and innovation. When it comes to cryptocurrency markets, it’s the phrase “ambiguity” that matters. If the agencies clarify where open-ended contracts lie, exchanges could have a clearer path to product design, while incumbents could have a stronger basis to challenge products they believe are misclassified.
The legal context is equally vital. CME questioned the CFTC’s approval path for certain retail perpetual contracts, arguing that these products should be treated differently under current law. A separate market commentary suggests that CME may make a forceful case, but this remains a commentary and not a court ruling.
Why cryptocurrency exchanges are watching closely
Perpetual futures contracts are one of the most vital trading products in cryptocurrencies. Outside the US, they have a enormous share of speculative volume, hedging and short-term market positioning. There has never been a lack of demand for this product in the US; it lacked a regulatory structure that would provide a clear path for major national platforms to offer this service.
Therefore, the definition process is vital not only for lawyers. If perpetual instruments can be offered via futures contracts, there could be more regulated systems competing for the flow of cryptocurrency derivatives. If regulators or courts determine that certain products constitute a legal substitution, compliance burdens and clearing requirements may change significantly.
For traders, the practical question is whether U.S. trading venues will ultimately be able to offer products that compete with foreign liquidity while maintaining domestic oversight. For stock exchanges, the question is whether the rulebook will become clearer or more restrictive.
What to watch next
The public comment process will not result in immediate changes to the market, and related disputes remain unresolved. The next sign to watch is the aggressive reaction of exchanges, incumbents and trading firms during the comment period, as these filings could reveal where the battle lines really lie on crypto perpetual contracts.
This report is based on information from CFTC.
This article was written by the News Desk and edited by Samuel Rae.
