landmark regulatory decision opens access to the most traded category of crypto derivatives — long off-limits to American investors
For years, American crypto traders watched from the sidelines as their counterparts abroad freely traded perpetual futures — the most popular and liquid instruments in global digital asset markets. That era ended on May 29, 2026, when the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) cleared Coinbase to connect domestic clients to crypto perpetual contracts, marking a watershed moment for the U.S. derivatives industry.
What Are Perpetual Contracts — and Why Do They Matter?
Before unpacking the regulatory significance, it helps to understand the product itself. Perpetual futures, often called “perps,” are derivative contracts that allow traders to speculate on the price of a cryptocurrency without ever owning the underlying asset. Unlike traditional futures, which expire on a set date and require traders to roll over their positions, perpetual contracts have no expiration date — meaning a position can be held indefinitely. They also support high leverage, allowing traders to amplify their exposure well beyond the capital they put up.
In the global crypto derivatives market, perpetual contracts dominate roughly 78% of the $85.7 trillion in annual trading volume. In 2025 alone, global crypto perpetual contract volume reached $61.7 trillion, a 29% increase year-on-year according to CryptoQuant data. That enormous market, however, had been almost entirely inaccessible to U.S. investors through regulated domestic channels — until now.
The CFTC’s Historic Move
On May 29, the CFTC cleared Coinbase and prediction market operator Kalshi to offer perpetual futures products, effectively moving these instruments from a regulatory gray area into a formal U.S. framework governed by federal derivatives law.
The mechanics differed slightly between the two firms. The CFTC approved Kalshi’s Bitcoin perpetual contract outright, while issuing Coinbase a no-action letter — meaning the agency formally stated it would not pursue enforcement action against the exchange for offering the product. This created a dual compliance path: Kalshi operating under a standard futures contract structure, and Coinbase routing products through foreign futures markets with crypto collateral.
Coinbase had submitted its request to the CFTC seeking a no-action letter that would allow it to provide U.S. customers access to offshore perpetual futures markets through Deribit, the Dubai-based derivatives exchange Coinbase acquired last year. Less than 24 hours later, the CFTC responded with a detailed 16-page policy document outlining a framework that permits the requested activity.
CFTC Chair Mike Selig called the action historic. “This morning, the CFTC took historic action to permit the listing of a true bitcoin perpetual contract by a CFTC-registered exchange, charting a path for one of the most liquid segments of the crypto asset markets to exist within the U.S. regulatory framework,” Selig said.

The CFTC’s Historic Move
Deribit at the Center
Central to Coinbase’s strategy is Deribit, the world’s largest crypto options exchange by open interest. Options on Deribit, which Coinbase acquired last year, are already live through Coinbase Financial Markets, with perpetual futures contracts set to follow. Deribit holds more than $31 billion in bitcoin options open interest.
Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong framed the approval in stark terms. Armstrong stated that U.S. users had been locked out of roughly 80% of global crypto markets — perpetual futures and options — characterizing the CFTC clearance as the end of that gap. He described Coinbase as now being the first and only regulated platform able to connect U.S. users to global crypto options
Coinbase Chief Legal Officer Paul Grewal echoed that sentiment. Grewal called the development a “massive first for the industry.”


Coinbase Receives CFTC Approval to Launch Crypto Perpetual Contracts
Why This Took So Long
The absence of regulated perpetuals in the U.S. had real consequences for American market participants. Many institutions stood up offshore entities to access these markets, adding counterparty exposure and duplicative infrastructure costs. The new framework is designed to remove those offshore workarounds and consolidate global liquidity through a single regulated broker.
It is worth noting that the CFTC’s new stance does not yet carry the weight of a formal rule. Like its sister agency the SEC, the CFTC has been moving through crypto policy via statements, no-action letters, approvals, and guidance — signaling its current stance without full rulemaking.
The agency also attached a cautionary note to its policy statement. The CFTC’s new policy requires case-by-case reviews for perpetual contracts linked to new asset categories, signaling heightened regulatory scrutiny going forward.
What Comes Next
Institutional clients at Coinbase Financial Markets gained access immediately, with Prime client onboarding beginning on May 29. Retail access is expected to follow, though Coinbase has not disclosed a timeline.
The approval is expected to drive significant institutional and retail funds back from offshore platforms to compliant U.S. channels, with several other exchanges likely to pursue similar applications.
For the broader crypto industry, the significance of the moment is hard to overstate. Perpetual contracts have long been the engine of global crypto trading — high-volume, high-leverage, and largely offshore. Their arrival inside the U.S. regulatory perimeter marks not just a product launch, but a structural shift in how America participates in digital asset markets.
















































