Article Author: Prathik Desai
Article Translation: Block unicorn
I always find it amusing when people bet on cryptocurrencies based on a tweet on X and move their money around. I've been there too. I remember five years ago, I put most of my month's savings into Dogecoin because, well, Elon Musk mentioned it on Twitter. Back then, I didn't even know what cryptocurrency was.
But some money doesn't enter the cryptocurrency space with just a tweet, a podcast, or a conference keynote. It takes more. Perhaps a memo from a federal regulatory agency, a risk assessment, and a trusted platform would help.
The latest statement from the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), which permits the trading of spot cryptocurrency products on CFTC-registered exchanges, is exactly that.
The CFTC's tacit approval may prompt the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME), the most formal derivatives trading market in the U.S., to list cryptocurrencies. If that happens, it would open the doors of the cryptocurrency market, attracting a massive influx of funds from traditional markets into the cryptocurrency space.
In today's in-depth analysis, I will explain how this move could bring cryptocurrencies into the same building where the U.S. stores its most trusted assets, and why this matters.
Let's get started.
Long before today's seamless financial markets emerged, people were reluctant to trade financial products. The issue wasn't a lack of buyers and sellers; there were plenty of both. The problem was a lack of trust, with everyone worrying, "What if the other party can't pay?"
Today, you no longer need to worry about that. This is thanks to the often-underrated invention of the modern stock exchange. It builds trust by standardizing contracts, enforcing disclosures, and regulating behavior. These mature markets incorporate all of this into "clearing" and "margin" mechanisms, preventing settlement risk from hindering traders' enthusiasm every day.
Despite all the talk about "trustless" systems, trust is hard to build in the cryptocurrency market. The latest announcement from the CFTC might just bridge that gap.
Acting CFTC Chairman Caroline Pham stated, "...listing spot cryptocurrency products will, for the first time, begin trading on a CFTC-registered futures exchange in the U.S." Pham expects this move to provide "more choices for the American public and make it easier for them to access safe, regulated U.S. markets."
This update redraws the boundaries of where the cryptocurrency focus might shift, as regulators work to integrate digital assets into the mainstream of the world's largest economy.
Just look at the data from the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME), and you'll understand how significant this could be for the spot cryptocurrency market.
On November 21, the CME set a new single-day record for cryptocurrency futures and options trading volume, reaching 794,903 contracts, surpassing the previous record of 728,475 contracts set on August 22 this year.
The market also reported how much trading activity has already shifted to its regulated framework this year. Its year-to-date (YTD) average daily trading volume is 270,900 contracts, with a notional value of approximately $12 billion, up 132% year-over-year. Meanwhile, the YTD average open interest is 299,700 contracts, with a notional value of $26.6 billion, up 82% year-over-year.
Even in a conservative scenario, if the CME converts just 5% of its notional trading volume into spot trading, that would amount to $600 million per day. If it reaches 15%, that number could approach $2 billion per day.
But what are the advantages of having both spot cryptocurrencies and derivatives under the same roof at the CME?
First, it shortens the distance between traders' positions and their hedges. Currently, many traders keep their cryptocurrency exposure in one place and their hedging positions in another. They might trade cryptocurrency futures on the CME because it's regulated and cleared, but their spot exposure might come from ETFs, prime brokers, or cryptocurrency exchanges. Jumping between different trading venues doesn't necessarily increase monetary costs, but it does create non-monetary friction. For example, it requires dealing with more counterparties, bearing more operational costs, and facing more risk points.
If a regulated market hosts both the spot and derivatives markets, hedging will be more convenient, and rolling over positions will be more efficient. Both parts of a trader's bet can be incorporated into the same compliance system, with margin, reporting, and monitoring already included.
Crypto-native platforms that operate both spot and derivatives—Coinbase (with Deribit), Kraken, and Robinhood—already benefit from this "one-stop-shop" service.
The second advantage is that it changes how large traders define "spot."
As a retail trader, when you buy spot on a cryptocurrency exchange, you think about the price of the asset. When a fund buys spot, they consider custody, settlement, reporting, and stability when the market is under stress.
Derivatives exchanges like the CME have already built systems that enhance market confidence. The clearinghouse, margin system, and monitoring provided by the CME can offer large fund companies a regulated safe harbor to safely deploy funds into the relatively volatile cryptocurrency market during uncertain times.
Hundreds of billions of dollars could flow in from large fund companies. U.S. spot Bitcoin ETF issuers alone hold over $112 billion in assets. Since their inception in January 2024, these issuers have accumulated over $57 billion in inflows.
An ecosystem combining spot and derivatives could encourage some investors to shift from "holding through funds" to "trading on the market." For fund companies, this can bring cost advantages and better control.
ETFs charge fees, and their purpose is to hold the underlying assets. Although they trade like stocks, during trading hours, they still rely on the infrastructure of the stock market. For fund companies that need to manage risk and exploit market inefficiencies, they prefer platforms that offer round-the-clock hedging, strict basis execution, frequent rebalancing, or market-making capabilities.
The third advantage is operational.
The CFTC explained this move as a response to "recent offshore exchange events," arguing that the American public deserves access to markets with consumer protections and market integrity guarantees. The key hidden behind this is leveraged trading. Pham explicitly pointed out that Congress had initiated reforms after the financial crisis and stated that Congress had intended retail commodity leveraged trading to occur on futures exchanges, but the rules had remained unclear for years.
Leveraged trading is the breeding ground for the worst events in the cryptocurrency space. Not looking back too far, the worst liquidation event in cryptocurrency history on October 10 wiped out $19 billion. If leveraged trading can be moved to platforms centered on monitoring, margin discipline, and clearing, it could at least improve transparency. You would no longer face opaque offshore清算, but instead have公开透明的保证金, known counterparties, and rules that aren't arbitrarily changed.
This update has even prompted cryptocurrency platforms to promise fair treatment for retail and large traders.
Soon, the U.S.-regulated derivatives exchange Bitnomial claimed it would provide "equal and fair treatment" to retail and institutional orders, with no preferential routing.
Taking all factors into account, the CFTC's move seems promising because it could make spot cryptocurrency trading easy and trustworthy, something previously only accessible to large capital flow trading.
The CFTC's statement won't turn the CME into a full-fledged spot cryptocurrency exchange tomorrow. Even if the market moves in this direction, the initial version might be conservative by design, with fewer trading pairs, strictly defined leverage terms, and trading channels going through intermediaries already in the CME ecosystem.
This is because trust has always been built slowly and gradually. Even historically, trust was established by putting safeguards in place first, not through a random tweet on X.
This concludes today's in-depth analysis. See you in the next article.








