The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) authorized a specialized Innovation Task Force on Tuesday to overhaul CFTC crypto regulatory frameworks for crypto, artificial intelligence, and prediction markets.
This initiative marks the first concrete step by Chair Michael Selig to transition U.S. derivatives oversight from an enforcement-based regime to a structured compliance pathway for decentralized protocols.
The move explicitly targets the regulatory gray zones that have pushed the majority of derivatives volume offshore.
- Task Force Scope: The new unit will develop specific regulatory approaches for three distinct verticals: crypto assets, AI integration, and prediction markets.
- Leadership: Michael Passalacqua, a former Simpson Thacher attorney, leads the effort as senior adviser to the Chair.
- Market Goal: The initiative aims to create a direct channel for “builders” to negotiate compliance frameworks rather than waiting for subpoenas.
The Mandate: From Litigation to Rulemaking
The strategy is a pivot away from the regulation-by-enforcement tactics that defined the previous administration. Michael Passalacqua, appointed in January, will direct the task force to work alongside the Innovation Advisory Committee. The objective is to define how code-based intermediaries can function within the Commodity Exchange Act.
“The idea behind our innovation advisory task force is really to create a space where innovators and builders can come in and talk to the staff,” Selig told attendees at the Digital Asset Summit in New York.
He was specific about the targets: “It’s not just crypto,” it’s going to be prediction markets, crypto, and AI. We think these three verticals are really important.”
This follows the precedent set by the joint CFTC-SEC interpretation regarding asset classification. The task force is expected to operationalize those high-level definitions into clearing and settlement rules. This creates the necessary legal ground for platforms like EDX Markets to launch perpetual futures without the looming threat of reclassification.
The inclusion of prediction markets is particularly notable. While venues like Kalshi have fought expensive court battles to list event contracts, the new task force suggests a move toward a generalized framework for event derivatives. This would standardize the rules for hedging political or economic outcomes, removing the case-by-case approval bottleneck.
The Liquidity Bifurcation: Onshore vs. Offshore
The market is already split.
US institutional capital is trapped in inefficient spot structures while price discovery happens on high-velocity offshore perpetuals. Hyperliquid’s record-breaking open interest proves traders prefer the capital efficiency of decentralized derivatives over rigid legacy infrastructure.
That volume exists with or without US approval.
The CFTC’s challenge is simple. Capture it or lose it permanently.
The task force adapts the definition of a Futures Commission Merchant to include smart contract code. Protocols register directly. Massive DeFi volume comes under US surveillance and the liquidity stays onshore.
Or the CFTC enforces bank-like capital requirements on software developers. Innovation gets banned. US builders geofence their own products. Asia captures the upside.
The global pressure is real. Circle is already pushing the EU to ease thresholds for its own market frameworks. The US is not competing against a slow-moving bureaucracy anymore. It is competing against jurisdictions actively writing code-compatible laws right now.
The technology is ready. The regulator is finally catching up.
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