CME Group CEO Terry Duffy has issued a stark warning about the push to introduce perpetual futures contracts in US regulated markets, calling them a potential "disaster waiting to happen." The comments mark one of the most direct public rebukes from a major exchange operator against a product structure that has dominated offshore crypto trading for years.
Why it matters
Perpetual futures — contracts with no expiry date that rely on a funding-rate mechanism to anchor prices to spot — have been the engine of leveraged crypto speculation on unregulated offshore venues like Binance and Bybit. Bringing them onshore under CFTC oversight has been a live debate, with some institutional players and crypto-native firms lobbying for access. Duffy's intervention carries weight: CME is the world's largest derivatives exchange and a primary venue for regulated crypto futures, giving his opposition significant political and regulatory gravity.
Market impact
A hostile posture from CME's CEO toward perp futures could slow or derail CFTC approval pathways for US-listed perpetual products, keeping institutional leverage flows on offshore venues longer than bulls had hoped. For crypto markets, that means the structural demand that a regulated perp market would have unlocked — pension funds, family offices, and hedge funds constrained to CFTC-regulated instruments — stays on the sidelines. Watch for any CFTC commissioner response or formal rulemaking signal as the next catalyst.
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