The CFTC is opening the door for federally regulated spot crypto trading in the U.S. for the first time, with Bitnomial’s exchange opening up next week.
Acting Chairman Caroline Pham announced that listed spot crypto products will trade on CFTC-registered exchanges, marking a major milestone in the effort to bring digital asset trading to the United States and under full federal oversight.
The announcement coincides with the launch of Bitnomial, Inc., a U.S.-based derivatives exchange, which will operate the first-ever leveraged retail spot crypto exchange under CFTC regulation.
Bitnomial’s Designated Contract Market (DCM) and Derivatives Clearing Organization (DCO) will allow both retail and institutional traders to trade spot, perpetuals, futures, and options on a single platform.
Unified portfolio margining and net settlement eliminate redundant margin requirements, boosting capital efficiency and reducing counterparty risk.
“Leveraged spot crypto trading is now available under the same regulatory framework as U.S. perpetuals, futures, and options,” said Luke Hoersten, founder and CEO of Bitnomial. “Broker intermediation and Clearinghouse net settlement provide the capital efficiency traders need. We’re bringing leveraged spot crypto trading back to the U.S. with CFTC oversight.”
Pham emphasized that the new framework gives Americans a safer alternative to offshore platforms, which have often been described as the “wild west.”
Speaking on Fox News, she highlighted the collapse of FTX as a cautionary tale, noting that many investors lost out due to a lack of regulatory protections.
“Not only do we want Americans to come back home to trade where they have the protections they deserve, but this also encourages U.S. companies to invest, build, and hire here,” Pham told Fox Business.
Under the new system, all orders—retail and institutional—will receive equal treatment. There is no preferential routing, no informational advantage, and equal access to liquidity, a structure long sought by industry participants.
For brokers and institutions, the move resolves longstanding compliance challenges related to state money transmitter rules, finally providing access to a federally regulated spot market.
The launch represents the culmination of Pham’s pro-innovation leadership at the CFTC. By recognizing that retail commodity transactions can be offered on a DCM and cleared through a DCO, the agency has created a compliant pathway for domestic leveraged spot crypto trading.
United States as a global crypto leader
This approach aligns with broader goals to make the U.S. a global hub for digital asset markets while maintaining investor protections. The convergence of spot, perpetuals, futures, and options on a single platform also transforms capital efficiency for traders.
Rather than maintaining fully collateralized positions across multiple venues, they can now offset risk across all product types on one exchange.
The Bitnomial platform is scheduled to go live the week of December 8, 2025. Pham called it a “historic milestone” for U.S. crypto markets and a key step in establishing the country as a leader in digital asset innovation.
CFTC greenlights Polymarket
Earlier this week, Polymarket, the crypto-based prediction market platform, launched a U.S.-focused app today after receiving CFTC approval, ending nearly four years of restrictions on American users.
Polymarket bypassed the traditional multi-year CFTC registration by acquiring QCEX, a registered platform, for $112 million, and received a no-action letter in September to resume U.S. operations.
The platform upgraded its systems to meet CFTC requirements, including enhanced surveillance, clearing procedures, and regulatory reporting.
It now supports direct Bitcoin deposits alongside stablecoins and has attracted potential investor interest, including a possible $2 billion investment from Intercontinental Exchange.
The CFTC was created in 1974 to regulate derivatives markets like futures, options, and swaps. Its mission is to oversee markets, prevent abuses, and protect customer funds. The agency monitors exchanges, trading platforms, and intermediaries, while its Division of Enforcement investigates violations.
Source: https://bitcoinmagazine.com/news/cftc-opens-door-for-spot-bitcoin-trading