Kalshi is reportedly planning to offer crypto perpetual futures, entering a market currently dominated by offshore platforms. This move raises significant questions about U.S. regulatory treatment of perpetual contracts and retail investor access.
Kalshi's reported plan to offer crypto perpetual futures is a direct challenge to Coinbase, Robinhood, and the offshore platforms that have dominated this product category for years. If this moves forward, it marks another step toward bringing crypto derivatives into the regulated U.S. market -- and that's worth watching closely.
Perpetual futures are derivative contracts that track an underlying asset's price without an expiration date. Unlike traditional futures that settle on a specific date, perpetuals use a funding rate mechanism to keep the contract price aligned with spot prices. They're enormously popular on offshore crypto exchanges. Binance, Bybit, and OKX have built massive businesses around them.
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The catch? They've been largely unavailable to U.S. retail investors through regulated channels. The CFTC has taken enforcement action against offshore platforms offering these products to U.S. persons without proper registration.
Kalshi operates as a CFTC-regulated designated contract market (DCM). They've built their business on event contracts -- prediction markets on elections, economic data, and other outcomes. The regulatory infrastructure is already in place.
If Kalshi can structure crypto perpetuals within their existing DCM framework, they could offer U.S. retail investors a product that's been off-limits through compliant channels. That's significant.
But here’s where the real compliance questions start.
The CFTC has jurisdiction over derivatives, but the line between what's a commodity future and what might implicate SEC authority continues to shift. Perpetual futures tied to tokens that might be securities create layered compliance considerations.
Kalshi has shown they'll fight regulatory battles when needed. Their election contract litigation proved that. Whether they'll face similar resistance here remains to be seen.
If you’re running compliance for a firm offering these products, you need to be tracking this, not just reading headlines, but mapping out what it means for your risk profile and supervisory procedures.
Coinbase launched perpetual futures for non-U.S. customers through Coinbase International. Robinhood has expanded crypto offerings but hasn't entered derivatives in a meaningful way domestically. If Kalshi successfully brings perpetuals to U.S. retail, it changes the competitive calculus.
Firms building crypto strategies need to monitor this. The product availability gap between U.S. and offshore markets has driven volume overseas. A regulated domestic option could shift that flow.
This is still in planning stages. Nothing is live yet. But the direction is clear. Regulated platforms are pushing to offer products that have historically existed only offshore. Compliance officers should be tracking this development and preparing for the possibility that crypto perpetuals become available through U.S.-regulated venues in the near term.
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Introducing customers to a CFTC-regulated DCM for futures trading typically requires registration as an introducing broker (IB) with the CFTC and membership in the NFA. Firms should review Commodity Exchange Act Section 4d and 4f requirements before offering access.
CME offers standard futures with fixed expiration dates on Bitcoin and Ether. Perpetuals have no expiration and use funding rate mechanisms to maintain price alignment with spot. The risk profile and margin dynamics differ significantly.
If your firm has any crypto or derivatives exposure, start the internal discussion now. Review your supervisory procedures for derivatives suitability and customer disclosures. You don't want to be updating policies reactively once products are live.
The content in this blog is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice, regulatory guidance, or an offer to sell or solicit securities. GiGCXOs is not a law firm. Compliance program requirements vary based on business model, customer base, and regulatory classification.
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