Washington D.C., Commodity Futures Trading Commission-Acting Chair Caroline Pham is actively pushing for the launch of leveraged spot crypto trading in the U.S. by December, utilising DCMs (Designated Contract Markets) to bring real-asset crypto products under federal derivatives regulation.
Under the initiative, regulated U.S. exchanges (DCMs) would be allowed to list spot crypto-asset contracts, meaning contracts directly tied to the underlying digital asset rather than derivatives, with leverage, margin, or financing provided to retail and institutional traders.
Pham has stated publicly that she expects these products to “begin trading in our markets before year’s end.” The framework would rely on existing authority under the Commodity Exchange Act (CEA) Section 2(c)(2)(D), which covers commodity transactions offered to retail customers with leverage, margin, or financing
Q: What exactly is being proposed by the CFTC?
Acting Chair Caroline Pham proposes that spot crypto asset contracts (direct exposure to digital assets) that incorporate leverage, margin, or financing be listed and traded on registered Designated Contract Markets (DCMs), using the CFTC’s existing regulatory authority under the Commodity Exchange Act.
Q: Why is the CFTC focusing on this now?
The CFTC is under pressure to fill regulatory gaps in digital assets and bring U.S. markets up to speed. The push is part of a larger so-called “crypto sprint” to act on recommendations from the President’s Working Group on Digital Asset Markets.
Q: How is this different from existing futures or spot trading of crypto?
Existing spot crypto trading in the U.S. occurs on platforms without the full federal oversight typical of futures exchanges. This proposed regime would allow leveraged spot trading under the same regulatory structure (DCM) used for commodity derivatives, which is new.
Q: When could the first products be available?
Pidged date is December 2025, according to Acting Chair Pham. However, full market launch will depend on rule-making, exchange readiness, and asset eligibility.
Q: What risks should potential participants be aware of?
Leverage in crypto significantly amplifies both gains and losses. Furthermore, the underlying asset’s regulatory status, volatility, liquidity, and exchange risk must all be carefully assessed.
Artificial intelligence continues to reshape the cryptocurrency industry. Zerebro ($ZEREBRO) has become one of the…
Coinbase-backed Layer-2 blockchain Base has postponed its highly anticipated Beryl network upgrade by one day.…
The Pepeto ($PEPETO) project has entered a critical stage of its token presale after raising…
The Solana memecoin ecosystem continues to attract traders searching for the next breakout project, and…
XRP remains one of the most closely watched cryptocurrencies as investors assess whether the token…
Real estate entrepreneur Grant Cardone has reaffirmed his long-term commitment to Bitcoin, saying he intends…
This website uses cookies.