Coinbase cleared to offer regulated crypto futures to eligible US customers

The crypto exchange has gained approval to operate as a futures commission merchant two years after filing an application with the National Futures Association

article-image

rafapress/Shutterstock, modified by Blockworks

share

Despite its ongoing legal battles with the SEC, Coinbase has gained approval from another regulator to offer eligible US customers access to crypto futures directly from its platforms.

The clearance to operate as a futures commission merchant (FCM) came from the National Futures Association, a self-regulatory organization designated by the Commodity and Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), Coinbase revealed Wednesday. 

“Offering US investors access to secure and regulated crypto futures is key to unlocking growth and enabling broader participation in the crypto economy,” Coinbase Financial Markets CEO Andrew Sears told Blockworks in an email.

Coinbase filed an application to the NFA to register as an FCM in September 2021. 

The crypto exchange went on to acquire CFTC-regulated futures exchange FairX — now known as the Coinbase Derivatives Exchange — the following year. Open to third-party brokers, FCMs and market makers, the derivatives exchange has traded year-to-date notional volume amounting to $4.7 billion in BTC futures contracts and $2 billion in ETH futures.

Coinbase said when it bought the futures exchange that it planned to eventually “leverage FairX’s infrastructure to offer crypto derivatives to all Coinbase customers in the US.” 

Access to crypto futures will first be available to users of Coinbase Advanced Trade in a few weeks, a spokesperson told Blockworks Wednesday. It will then become available to customers of institutional-focused prime brokerage platform Coinbase Prime later on, the representative added.

“Obtaining FCM approval was our next step in bringing these transparent and secure markets to our customers so they can access regulated futures contracts alongside our liquid spot market,” Greg Tusar, Coinbase’s head of institutional products, wrote in a Wednesday blog post.

The global crypto derivatives market — giving investors the ability to manage risk via long and short positions — represents roughly 75% of global crypto trading volume, according to Coinbase. 

CME Group reported that the average daily volume for its crypto futures and options during the second quarter amounted to 38,600 contracts. 

“Under the supervision of the CFTC and NFA, Coinbase will be able to offer regulated futures in a manner that protects consumers and helps ensure that the US remains a center for digital innovation,” Coinbase Chief Policy Officer Faryar Shirzad said.

Coinbase’s clearance to offer crypto futures to US customers comes as the exchange is engaged in a legal battle with the SEC. The regulator sued the publicly traded company in June, alleging that it has been operating as an unregistered exchange — charges Coinbase has denied.  


Start your day with top crypto insights from David Canellis and Katherine Ross. Subscribe to the Empire newsletter.

Explore the growing intersection between crypto, macroeconomics, policy and finance with Ben Strack, Casey Wagner and Felix Jauvin. Subscribe to the On the Margin newsletter.

The Lightspeed newsletter is all things Solana, in your inbox, every day. Subscribe to daily Solana news from Jack Kubinec and Jeff Albus.

Tags

Upcoming Events

Salt Lake City, UT

MON - TUES, OCT. 7 - 8, 2024

Blockworks and Bankless in collaboration with buidlbox are excited to announce the second installment of the Permissionless Hackathon – taking place October 7-8 in Salt Lake City, Utah. We’ve partnered with buidlbox to bring together the brightest minds in crypto for […]

Salt Lake City, UT

WED - FRI, OCTOBER 9 - 11, 2024

Permissionless is a conference for founders, application developers, and users. Come meet the next generation of people building and using crypto.

recent research

Research Report Templates (1).png

Research

Solana Mobile is a highly ambitious foray into the mobile consumer hardware market, seeking to open up a crypto-native distribution channel for mobile-first applications. The market for Solana Mobile devices has demonstrated a phenomenon whereby external market actors (e.g. Solana-native projects) continuously underwrite subsidies to Mobile consumers. The value of these subsidies, coming in the form of airdrops, trial programs, and exclusive NFT mints, have consistently covered the cost of the phone and generated positive returns for consumers. Given this trend in subsidies, the unit economics in the market for Mobile devices, and the initial growth rate and trajectory of sales, it should be expected that Solana mobile can clear 1M to 10M units over the coming years. As more devices circulate amongst users, Solana Mobile presents a promising venue for the emergence of killer-applications uniquely enabled by this mobile-first, crypto-native distribution channel.

article-image

Analysts are looking ahead to August, a historically volatile month made more interesting this year by the US presidential election

article-image

Plus, a look into Lighting Labs’ newest feature

article-image

Crypto’s Wild West era is over — it’s time to embrace regulation to secure the future of digital assets

article-image

Plus, Solana has now surpassed Ethereum in trailing 30-day decentralized exchange volume

article-image

Polymarket betters say Kamala Harris has better odds than Biden of winning against Trump