On June 1, the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) announced an upgrade to its product self-certification system. Under the new system, exchanges can combine multiple similar contracts into a single document when submitting new product applications, reducing redundant certification materials. This change follows continuous regulatory progress in the U.S. cryptocurrency perpetual futures market.
Similar contracts can be submitted together.
The CFTC stated that the new system aims to reduce duplicate filings and improve processing efficiency. Previously, when exchanges launched multiple contracts with similar structures, they typically needed to submit separate certification documents with similar content. With the update, these filings can be processed centrally.
Regulators say the new submission process will help exchanges save time, reduce duplicate paperwork, and improve responsiveness when launching new products. Jessica Harris, head of the CFTC's data division, said the streamlined process will allow exchanges to focus more on product development.
Bitcoin perpetual futures see a flurry of activity following.
This technological upgrade comes at a time when the regulation of crypto perpetual futures in the United States is accelerating significantly. Just days ago, the CFTC approved Kalshi's launch of BTCPERP, making it the first regulated Bitcoin perpetual futures contract in the US.
In addition to this approval, the CFTC recently issued broader guidance on perpetual contracts, clarified that some crypto perpetual products can be treated as foreign futures, and issued an exemption arrangement for Coinbase and Deribit's perpetual trading infrastructure, granting them no enforcement action.
Application process to accommodate market expansion
Perpetual futures have long been concentrated on offshore crypto trading platforms because these products have no fixed expiration date, allowing traders to maintain continuous leveraged exposure. Now, the US is beginning to approve regulated Bitcoin perpetual futures, indicating that this segment of the market is gradually entering a domestic compliance framework.
This update indicates that regulators are no longer solely focused on whether to allow new products to enter the market, but also on how to expedite the submission process for exchanges and enable regulators to handle the increasing number of product applications more efficiently. As crypto derivatives continue to expand, similar procedural adjustments are likely to continue.
- On June 1, the CFTC announced an upgrade to its reporting system.
- Similar contracts can be combined into a single certification document.
- Kalshi Bitcoin perpetual futures recently approved












