The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and its staff completed a series of coordinated regulatory actions on May 29, 2026, to formalize the U.S. market for perpetual digital commodity futures.
Among these measures, staff issued a no-action position and an interpretive letter providing a streamlined path for Designated Contract Markets (DCMs) to convert existing “perpetual-style” futures into true perpetual contracts. This infrastructure shift allows exchanges to remove artificial expiry dates from long-dated contracts and migrate open interest into native perpetual structures.
A true perpetual futures contract differs from standard futures because it has no settlement date. Instead, it uses a periodic funding rate mechanism to anchor the contract price to the spot price of the underlying digital commodity. Since late 2025, U.S.
venues like Cboe Futures Exchange had utilized a workaround, offering 10-year maturity contracts with daily cash adjustments. The new May 29 guidance allows these incumbents to drop the 10-year expiry without undergoing a full re-certification under Regulation 40.3.
The regulatory burst also included the milestone approval of KalshiEX LLC to list its bitcoin perpetual futures contract, known as BTCPERP. This product, referencing the CF Benchmarks Bitcoin Real Time Index, marked the first true perpetual to receive Commission approval for a domestic DCM. Institutional interest in such products remains high as com/bitcoin-price-consolidation-78k-rejection-whale-accumulation-analysis-2026/”>whales accumulate during futures-led selloffs, suggesting these regulated derivatives are becoming essential tools for large-scale portfolio management.
Establishing the framework for non-expiry contracts
The CFTC’s May 29 policy statement encourages exchanges to voluntarily submit perpetual contracts for asset classes beyond bitcoin for review. This formal process involves prior engagement with the commission, distinguishing it from the standard self-certification route used for traditional futures.
By establishing this framework, the agency is addressing the unique technical requirements of products that trade 24/7 and use continuous funding mechanisms rather than fixed expiries.
To support this round-the-clock model, the CFTC’s Market Participants Division and other departments issued Staff Advisory No. 26-16. This document outlines supervisory expectations for DCMs and Derivatives Clearing Organizations (DCOs) operating on a 24/7 basis. The advisory ensures that while markets become more accessible, the underlying clearing and risk management infrastructure can handle the lack of traditional weekend breaks or daily settlement windows.
The agency also addressed international access by issuing an interpretive letter for Coinbase Financial Markets, Inc. (CFM). This action confirms that certain perpetual contracts traded on foreign boards of trade, such as the Deribit perpetuals regulated in Dubai, can be treated as “foreign futures” under Regulation 30.1. This allows U.S.
customers regulated access to offshore liquidity pools for digital commodities that feature deep and observable spot markets.
Industry reaction and the risk of retail leverage
While many in the crypto industry view the May 29 actions as a pivotal step toward modernization, established financial players have expressed caution. CME Group CEO Terry Duffy has been a prominent critic, describing the arrival of U.S. crypto perpetuals as a “disaster waiting to happen.”
Duffy’s concerns center on the high leverage typically associated with perpetuals and the potential for retail investor losses in a market without expiration-based cooling-off periods.
CME Group has notably avoided listing perpetuals, preferring its existing suite of standard-expiry futures that carry lower leverage profiles. This creates a clear divide in the market between “native crypto” structures favored by newer exchanges and the conservative models maintained by traditional venues.
Traders navigating these different environments often look for technical confirmations, as Bitcoin traders prioritise the 200-Day Moving Average to gauge overall market health during periods of structural change.
The path forward now involves the potential expansion of these products into the altcoin sector. Shortly after the bitcoin approval, Kalshi filed to list perpetuals on 12 additional altcoins under the new Regulation 40.3 framework.
If approved, this move would signify the most rapid expansion of the domestic digital asset derivatives market since its inception. For now, the CFTC under Chairman Michael S. Selig appears focused on bringing the economics of global crypto trading into a regulated U.S. environment.
