The Chairman of the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), Mike Selig, outlined the key focus areas for the coming years at the FIA Global Clearing Market Conference. The core directions include: opening true crypto perpetual contracts within weeks, ending the regulatory turf war between the CFTC and SEC, and establishing a “gold standard” regulatory framework for prediction markets.
(Background: The joint declaration by the SEC and CFTC on “coordinated regulation”: exploring prediction market thresholds and introducing perpetual contracts)
(Additional context: What is SEC’s Project Crypto aiming for, and what is Trump trying to hype?)
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In his speech, Selig pointed out that the U.S. is experiencing a technological revolution driven by AI, blockchain, and prediction markets. The CFTC needs to ensure that its regulatory framework can adapt to this change, rather than hinder innovation.
He advocates the principle of “minimum effective intervention,” emphasizing that the CFTC should adopt a forward-looking, principled regulatory approach rather than rigid rule-based regulation.
Selig considers crypto perpetual contracts one of the top policy priorities. He announced that the CFTC is working to enable “genuine perpetual contracts — not long-term futures” to be launched in the U.S. market, with a policy framework expected to be finalized within weeks.
Crypto perpetual contracts have long been developed offshore due to unclear U.S. regulations, with significant liquidity flowing to trading platforms in Asia, Europe, and the Bahamas. Selig’s goal is to bring this liquidity back to the U.S., while formal rulemaking will provide a more solid legal foundation for these products.
Selig explicitly stated the need to end the long-standing jurisdiction disputes between the CFTC and SEC, as well as the practice of “regulation by enforcement.” Over the past few years, the two agencies have clashed over which crypto assets qualify as securities and which as commodities, leaving industry players uncertain.
This aligns with SEC Chair Paul Atkins’ push for “Project Crypto” — both agencies are trying to establish a unified framework through joint declarations and coordination mechanisms in areas like product definitions, reporting formats, and capital requirements.
Beyond crypto regulation, Selig’s speech covered a broader policy agenda:
The overall tone is clear: Selig wants the CFTC to return to its role as a “market facilitator,” reducing political interference and replacing vague enforcement with clear rules. For the crypto industry, the opening of perpetual contracts and clarification of CFTC-SEC jurisdiction will be the most immediate positives in the short term.