CFTC Chairman Michael Selig plans to allow U.S.-listed crypto perpetual futures within weeks.
The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) is preparing to formally pave the way for crypto perpetual futures to operate onshore, in what could mark one of the most significant structural changes to the digital asset derivatives market since the approval of spot exchange-traded products. According to remarks attributed to Chairman Michael Selig and relayed via a report from CoinDesk, the agency is “working to launch professional futures – true professional futures – in the United States within the next month or so,” and several policy announcements are expected soon. The initiative aims to end years of regulatory ambiguity that pushed much of the perpetual futures business to offshore platforms, leaving U.S. markets dependent on less standardized products and fragmented liquidity.
Selig’s comments, delivered at an event in Washington alongside SEC Chairman Paul Atkins, present perpetual futures as a critical risk management and price discovery tool that should exist in a transparent, supervised environment rather than primarily on unregulated exchanges. He argued that the previous approach “failed to create a pathway” for onshore perpetual securities, contributing to capital flight and an uneven playing field for U.S. companies. Under the new guidance, the CFTC intends to use its regulatory powers to authorize additional types of token collateral and to define the conditions under which perpetual derivatives and other new derivatives may be listed and traded, subject to margin, clearing and conduct guarantees.
Impact on markets and locations
Market participants immediately began debating how onshore perpetual securities could reshape flows between U.S.-registered markets and the offshore exchanges that have historically dominated perpetual securities volume. Some commentators have suggested that regulated contracts could divert some institutional and professional activity away from lightly supervised venues, particularly as large platforms such as Coinbase expand their CFTC-registered offerings beyond existing structured products. Others question whether debt caps, integration requirements and oversight obligations could limit the appeal of U.S.-listed players relative to highly leveraged offshore alternatives that remain outside the direct reach of U.S. regulators.
The timeline also intersects with broader reforms under “Project Crypto,” which seeks clearer rules for DeFi developers, prediction markets and retail leveraged products, as well as parallel regulatory developments in other jurisdictions under regimes like MiCA. If successful, relocating more of the perpetual futures complex could tighten the link between CFTC-supervised benchmarks and BTC spot markets, improving transparency while potentially reducing systemic risk associated with opaque, cross-border leverage cycles. For traders and businesses, upcoming announcements will determine how quickly new contracts can be listed, what collateral will be eligible, and whether a significant portion of global perpetual liquidity will migrate to the U.S. regulatory perimeter.