The US derivatives debate has just entered a much more important phase.
The Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission have opened a joint request for public comment on whether existing derivatives definitions still fit the products now coming to market. The request focuses on areas such as swaps, security-based swaps, mixed swaps, new products, emerging products and alternative compliance.
That sounds technical, but the timing is important. The request came as the market also sees a legal battle over perpetual futures, including whether products approved for event contract platforms should be treated as futures or swaps under the Dodd-Frank framework. For crypto traders, the core problem is simple: the label that regulators choose can determine who can offer a product, what safeguards apply, and how much access private and institutional users have.
TL; DR
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- The SEC and CFTC have filed a joint request for comment on the definitions of derivatives products.
- The agencies are asking about swaps, security-based swaps, mixed swaps, new products and alternative compliance.
- The comment window will remain open for 60 days after publication of the Federal Register.
- The move comes as CME has challenged the CFTC’s approval of perpetual futures-like products for event contract platforms.
Why the Definitions Matter for Crypto
Crypto markets have always borrowed heavily from derivatives. Perpetual futures, funding rates, collateralized positions and synthetic exposure are critical to the offshore trading business. In contrast, the U.S. market has been slower and more fragmented as categories of regulators decide which locations can list, disclose and monitor each product.
The SEC and CFTC said their request is part of a broader effort to evaluate whether current jurisdictional frameworks reflect evolving market structures and trading practices. That wording is important because crypto is not mentioned as the only problem. Instead, the agencies are looking at the broader architecture around products that may not fit neatly into old definitions.
Yet crypto is clearly one of the markets most exposed to the outcome. If a perpetual contract is treated as a swap, different rules may apply than for a futures contract. That could change clearing obligations, venue rules, reporting requirements and the practical economics of offering the product in the US.
CME lawsuit adds extra pressure
The policy discussion does not take place in a vacuum. CME Group has filed a lawsuit challenging the CFTC’s approval of perpetual futures contracts for event contract platforms including Kalshi and Coinbase. According to the legal context discussed for this article, CME argues that contracts without expiration dates and with periodic financing mechanisms should be viewed as swaps and not as regular futures.
That argument goes straight to the commercial heart of the market. Established derivatives platforms do not want new entrants to offer economically similar products under a lighter framework. Newer platforms, meanwhile, are pushing for a regulatory pathway that allows them to compete with offshore crypto exchanges and prediction market-style venues.
The SEC and CFTC did not frame their joint request as a direct response to CME’s lawsuit. But the overlap is hard to ignore. Both developments point to the same question: how should regulators deal with modern derivatives that blur the lines between futures, swaps, event contracts and crypto-native perpetuals?
What happens next
The agencies are asking the public to submit feedback for 60 days after publication of the request in the Federal Register. That process will give exchanges, trading firms, crypto firms, legal experts and investor protection groups a chance to shape the next round of regulatory interpretation.
For crypto, the stakes are bigger than one lawsuit or one product approval. If the US can build a clearer derivatives framework, more activity could move to the country and to regulated platforms. If the rules remain unclear, platforms may continue to face a patchwork of approvals, objections and lawsuits.
The short-term conclusion is that the SEC and CFTC are not responding to just one product category. They reopen the map for how emerging market derivatives should be classified. For a market that relies heavily on leverage and synthetic exposure, that’s a discussion worth keeping a close eye on.
This article was written by the News Desk and edited by Samuel Rae.
