Crypto exchange OKX and the Intercontinental Exchange (ICE) announced a partnership on Friday, May 22, 2026, to launch perpetual futures based on the world’s most prominent energy benchmarks. These new contracts will settle against ICE Brent Crude and West Texas Intermediate (WTI) Crude prices, marking a significant step in bridging traditional commodity markets with digital asset infrastructure. The launch follows a strategic relationship established in March 2026, when ICE, the parent company of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), made a strategic equity investment in OKX that valued the crypto firm at $25 billion.
The deal allows OKX’s base of more than 120 million customers to access energy benchmark products in a regulated environment. Under the operational structure, ICE licenses its Brent and WTI futures prices to OKX, while the crypto exchange manages the perpetual structure, crypto-based margin, and global distribution. These “perps” are highly popular among retail traders because they allow for speculation on asset prices without an expiration date or the need to own the underlying physical commodity. This accessibility grows even more relevant as Bitcoin price analysis shows digital asset traders increasingly looking toward macro-hedging tools.
The partnership highlights a dual-track strategy by ICE. While the exchange giant is deepening its commercial ties to the crypto industry through its investment and a board seat at OKX, it is simultaneously pressuring US regulators to tighten oversight on decentralized rivals. ICE and CME Group have reportedly urged the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and lawmakers on Capitol Hill to rein in the decentralized derivatives platform Hyperliquid, citing concerns over the lack of traditional intermediary structures.
ICE energy benchmarks reach global retail audience
The collaboration provides OKX with the official licensing to use ICE’s deep and liquid price data for its energy derivatives. Trabue Bland, Senior Vice President of Futures Exchanges at ICE, noted that those new contracts allow OKX’s customer base to access energy benchmark products through transparent, global markets. The move effectively extends the reach of traditional oil benchmarks to a 24/7 retail audience familiar with digital asset infrastructure. This shift occurs as macro warning signs emerge, prompting traders to seek assets with established global demand.
Haider Rafique, Global Managing Partner at OKX, described the oil markets as critical to the world economy. He stated that bringing Brent and WTI futures into a regulated perpetual format provides the bridge between traditional and digital markets that participants have requested. The products will only be available in jurisdictions where OKX is licensed to offer perpetual futures trading, which likely excludes the United States for the initial launch phase.
While this partnership formalizes the pricing feed, OKX has been active in the energy space throughout this year. OKX had already listed USDT-margined oil perpetuals tied to Brent and WTI-linked benchmarks earlier in 2026. Specifically, the exchange launched WTI crude oil (CL) perpetual futures on March 4, 2026, followed by Brent oil (BZ) perpetual futures on March 24, 2026. This formal tie-up with ICE reinforces the legitimacy of those feeds by linking them directly to the source benchmarks.
NYSE parent pressures CFTC over Hyperliquid oversight
Even as ICE expands its footprint via OKX, it is taking an aggressive stance against decentralized derivatives platforms like Hyperliquid. ICE and CME Group have reportedly engaged with officials at the CFTC to voice concerns regarding the regulatory oversight of decentralized exchanges (DEXs). These traditional exchange operators argue that platforms offering perpetual futures without traditional clearing or intermediary structures may operate with an unfair advantage.
Hyperliquid has recently seen massive activity, including high-stakes positioning from major market participants. Just recently, a Hyperliquid whale defended a $40 level on the HYPE token with a $12.7 million long bet. Such volatility and scale in the decentralized sector have clearly caught the attention of ICE, which appears determined to see the same regulatory standards applied to on-chain platforms as those applied to its own regulated entities.
The tension illustrates the friction between established financial giants and emerging decentralized protocols. ICE is now effectively playing both sides of the market — profiting from the growth of regulated crypto-native firms through its $25 billion valued stake and board seat at OKX, while simultaneously lobbying to restrict the growth of decentralized competitors that bypass traditional exchange silos.
Future outlook for digital commodity derivatives
The launch of these oil-linked perps may signal a wider trend of traditional commodities being integrated into crypto-native trading formats. If the Brent and WTI products gain sufficient traction, the strategic partnership between ICE and OKX could eventually expand to include other global benchmarks. This would further blur the lines between traditional commodity trading and the digital asset ecosystem.
For US regulators, the pressure from ICE and CME Group creates a complex policy challenge. The CFTC must decide how to address decentralized protocols that offer products identical to those found on regulated exchanges but without the same corporate oversight. As OKX rolls out its oil perps internationally, the debate in Washington will center on whether the decentralized model can be brought under the existing regulatory umbrella.
