CFTC And SEC Seek Input On Derivatives Definitions As Crypto Perpetuals Face Legal Test

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The CFTC and SEC have opened a joint public comment process on derivatives product definitions, adding fresh regulatory weight to a debate that could shape how crypto perpetual futures are treated in the United States.

TL;DR

The agencies are seeking input on definitions under Title VII of Dodd-Frank. The move lands as perpetual futures approvals face legal scrutiny. The comment window is expected to run for 60 days after publication in the Federal Register. The outcome could influence which venues can offer crypto derivatives and under what clearing rules.

Derivatives Definitions Move Back Into Focus

The joint request is not a crypto-only document, but the timing makes it highly relevant for digital asset markets. Perpetual futures sit in an awkward place for US regulators because the product resembles a futures contract in trading behavior, yet some critics argue the economic design can overlap with swap-style exposure. That distinction is not academic. It affects clearing, margining, venue approvals and the competitive landscape between traditional futures exchanges and newer crypto-native venues.

CFTC Chairman Michael Selig said the request offers an opportunity to address ambiguities within Title VII of Dodd-Frank that have limited competition and innovation. For crypto markets, the phrase that matters is “ambiguities.” If agencies clarify where perpetual-style contracts sit, exchanges could gain a clearer route to product design, while incumbents may gain a stronger basis for challenging products they believe are misclassified.

The legal context is equally important. CME has challenged the CFTC’s approval path for certain retail-focused perpetual contracts, arguing that the products should be treated differently under existing law. Separate market commentary has suggested CME may have a strong argument, but that remains commentary rather than a court outcome.

Why Crypto Exchanges Are Watching Closely

Perpetual futures are one of the most important trading products in crypto. Outside the United States, they account for a large share of speculative volume, hedging and short-term market positioning. The US has never lacked demand for the product; it has lacked a regulatory structure that gives major domestic platforms a clean path to offer it.

That is why the definitions process matters for more than lawyers. If perpetuals can be offered under a futures-style framework, the market may see more regulated venues compete for crypto derivatives flow. If regulators or courts conclude some products are legally swaps, the compliance burden and clearing requirements could change materially.

For traders, the practical question is whether US venues can eventually offer products that compete with offshore liquidity while maintaining domestic oversight. For exchanges, the question is whether the rulebook becomes clearer or more restrictive.

What To Watch Next

The public comment process will not produce instant market change, and the related litigation is still unresolved. The next signal to watch is how aggressively exchanges, incumbents and trading firms respond during the comment period, because those filings may reveal where the battle lines over crypto perpetuals are really being drawn.

This report is based on information from the CFTC.

This article was written by the News Desk and edited by Samuel Rae.

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