U.S. crypto firms can offer perpetual futures contracts, or “perps,” without running afoul of the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission, according to the agency’s first approval allowing Kalshi to list and trade U.S. bitcoin perpetuals, the regulator said on Friday.
In a related action, the agency also issued key guidance that allowed Coinbase Financial Markets to put its U.S. clients into global options and perps, tapping the largest current markets.
The perp is a kind of derivative that allows the investor to speculate on future price movements in a crypto asset without putting an expiration date on that contract, allowing it to be held as long as the investor wants. With this first approval on a registered platform, the U.S. derivatives regulator with a long history overseeing traditional crypto futures now opens a U.S. path for the potentially lucrative and popular arena of crypto perps that have previously been pursued more in non-U.S. jurisdictions.
The CFTC announced Kalshi is approved for the first true bitcoin-referenced perp, BTCPERP, and the agency said the approval “requires, among other terms and conditions, that Kalshi list and maintain the BTCPERP Contract in compliance with all applicable provisions of the Commodity Exchange Act.” While Kalshi is best known in the public as a leading prediction markets platform, the registered exchange has been expanding its business footprint.
“This marks Kalshi’s evolution from prediction market leader to next-gen derivatives exchange,” said Tarek Mansour, CEO of Kalshi, in a post on the company’s website that called their event-contract business only the first chapter. “Onshore, safe and regulated perps will improve capital allocation and risk management for countless American businesses.”
In a letter sent to Coinbase on the same day, the CFTC said it would permit certain perpetual futures products that Coinbase intends to list through its CFM subsidiary. These perpetual futures will be routed through Coinbase Bermuda, so they’ll be treated as “foreign futures.” The no-action letter will allow CFM to post customers’ digital assets (including bitcoin, ether and stablecoins) as margin collateral for these products.
Paul Grewal, Coinbase chief legal officer, called it a “massive first for the industry” in a post on social media site X.
The CFTC announcements follow closely on the heels of President Donald Trump’s social-media post this week that cited perpetuals and argued that the previous administration’s regulators “nearly DESTROYED the American Crypto Industry by driving Bitcoin, Crypto Perpetuals, and INNOVATION offshore, but ‘TRUMP’ SAVED IT.”
Trump’s CFTC chairman, Mike Selig, argued that the contracts represent “a foundational risk management and price discovery tool in the global crypto asset markets.”
“Having true perpetual contracts in the United States is a major step forward in delivering on President Trump’s goal of cementing America as the crypto capital of the world,” Selig wrote in an opinion piece published Friday at CoinDesk. He said his agency is now providing “a workable framework for true crypto asset perpetual contracts.”
Perps, typically amplified with leverage, can be a way to cash in big on even minor price movements in assets such as bitcoin
Selig had said in March that he has been trying to repair damage from the previous U.S. administration that “drove a lot of these firms and the liquidity offshore.” Some of the other crypto-native exchanges the agency oversees in the U.S. include Bitnomial (just acquired by Kraken) and Gemini, plus Kalshi’s prediction-market rival, Polymarket.
Selig wrote on Friday that his agency’s approach to perps would “limit excessive leverage, volatility and systemic risk.”
There are other dangers associated with perpetuals, too, as witnessed this week with the flash crash in the Hyperliquid SPACEX-USDH, a crypto perpetual contract for SpaceX’s market valuation, catching many investors off-guard and wiping out some $1.5 million in notional value within 30 minutes because of one outsized position that absorbed the market’s thin liquidity.
The CFTC’s new stance doesn’t yet carry the weight of a formal rule. The CFTC and its sister agency, the Securities and Exchange Commission, have been blazing a crypto policy trail with new statements, so-called no-action letters (like the one sent to Coinbase on Friday), approvals and guidance revealing their current stance on various aspects of the industry. But until the policies are set with formal rules or — even more durable — new laws, then they can be easily overturned by future agency leaders.
In March, the two agencies released highly consequential guidance that — for the first time — offered their definitions for classifying various crypto assets. The new taxonomy described a series of buckets the assets could be placed in that would establish how they’d be regulated and by whom, and it also set out standards for how a crypto security may eventually transition out of that classification as its project matures.
The SEC is also poised to release a wide-reaching new crypto policy meant to pave the way for the tokenization of securities by offering temporary exemptions from registration for digital asset innovations. The shift — a marquee project for SEC Chairman Paul Atkins — is planned as an interim measure to foster crypto activity while the industry awaits a more permanent law from Congress.
Read More: CFTC chief Selig to clear path for U.S. perpetual futures in coming weeks
UPDATE (May 29, 2026, 14:17 UTC): Adds identification of the approved firm, Kalshi, and the addition of no-action guidance involving Coinbase.
UPDATE (May 29, 2026, 14:30 UTC): Adds remarks from Kalshi.
UPDATE (May 29, 2026, 14:44 UTC): Adds detail and remarks from Coinbase.