CFTC Opens Door to Spot Crypto Trading on U.S. Futures Exchanges

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The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) is moving to greenlight the trading of spot crypto asset contracts on federally registered futures exchanges.

The regulator said on Monday that it will begin allowing spot crypto contracts—such as those for Bitcoin and Ether—to be listed and traded on Designated Contract Markets (DCMs), provided they meet the standards required under existing CFTC rules. It’s the first time federal regulators have taken coordinated steps to allow real-time spot crypto trading on registered platforms.

The move comes in tandem with the Securities and Exchange Commission’s “Project Crypto,” which seeks to build a more formal framework for defining and regulating digital tokens.

“Together, we will make America the crypto capital of the world,” said CFTC acting chair Caroline Pham, adding that the agency will work with exchanges and market participants to “enable immediate trading of digital assets at the Federal level.”

The timing aligns with broader policy momentum in Washington to create clearer rules for crypto. Under President Trump’s administration, the sector has gained ground with the introduction of the GENIUS Act and CLARITY Act, two pieces of legislation intended to bring regulatory certainty to digital assets, particularly around stablecoins and token classifications.

The SEC, now led by Chair Paul Atkins, said it will support a more practical approach. Last week, Atkins outlined a roadmap for crypto-related disclosures, exemptions, and clearer security classifications—moves welcomed by both industry advocates and institutional players that have long criticized the regulatory grey zone.

While the CFTC’s latest announcement stops short of broader oversight for the entire crypto space, it is a critical step toward legitimizing crypto spot markets within the existing futures infrastructure. The regulator is also opening a comment window for industry input on how such listings can best function under its existing statutory framework.

Still, some lines remain firmly drawn as the longstanding SEC ban on crypto derivatives for retail investors remains in place. Investors won’t be protected by the Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS), and market participants will still need to navigate a maze of federal and state-level regulations.

But the tone is notably more cooperative than in years past, and regulators appear intent on harmonizing rules rather than working at cross purposes.

The digital asset industry, which has long pushed for tailored regulation rather than enforcement-first policies, sees the shift as overdue.

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