CFTC chair Selig defends decision to approve ‘perps’ in U.S.

Michael Selig said that incumbents will always fear the future, but it’s important to develop the new asset class domestically rather than only offshore.

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  • CFTC chair Michael Selig said in an appearance on CNBC’s “Fast Money” that incumbents will always fear the future, but it’s important perpetual futures are developed domestically.
  • Perpetual futures, known as “perps,” are similar to futures contracts but have no expiration date.
  • Selig also dismissed concerns that retail consumers could be at a disadvantage due to the complexity of perpetual futures contracts.

CFTC Chair Michael Selig tackles perpetual futures ‘misconceptions’watch nowVIDEO08:52CFTC Chair Michael Selig tackles perpetual futures ‘misconceptions’Fast Money

Commodity Futures Trading Commission chair Michael Selig weighed into the perpetual futures debate in a Monday appearance on CNBC’s “Fast Money,” defending his agency’s decision to approve the asset domestically.

Selig said that incumbents will always fear the future, but that the commission is looking to onshore products that are being developed internationally to ensure they can be made safely under robust regulations.

“It’s time to approve regulated futures contracts that have no expiration date,” he said. “We’re going to make sure the product’s available, but it’s well regulated here in the U.S.”

In late May, the CFTC approved prediction market platform Kalshi to begin offering bitcoin perpetual futures, or “perps,” futures contracts with no expiration date that allow traders to speculate on a price without owning the underlying asset. Popular overseas, the approval marked the first time the asset class was allowed in the U.S. Kalshi has since expanded its perps offerings to other cryptocurrencies.

Demand for perps has been high. At a Thursday event celebrating its perps product, Kalshi said its contracts had done more than $3 billion in notional volume in just over a week in beta testing. 

In an appearance on “Fast Money” shortly after the regulatory decision, CME Group CEO Terrence Duffy blasted the decision to approve perps, including voicing concerns that the leverage carried with the contracts is large and risky. 

But Selig dismissed that argument in his appearance Monday. 

“The notion that we should be paternalistic and allow for one type of product, because it’s easier to understand, I think that’s frankly a misunderstanding itself, because, of course, options are very complicated,” he said. “We’re going to make sure there’s proper disclosure. And to the extent that there’s questions around suitability, of course, the brokers have to make those calls and make sure that they’re evaluating the customers that are trading in their markets.”

In an appearance on “Fast Money” last week, Kalshi CEO Tarek Mansour noted that the maximum leverage that the company is allowing on its perps — around six times — is less than that of what CME offers on some of its futures contracts. 

Selig also denied that the reason the CFTC moved to approve perps was due to political pressure from President Donald Trump’s administration. The president’s son, Donald Trump Jr., is a strategic advisor to Kalshi.

“That’s absolutely absurd, that insinuation,” he said. 

Disclosure: CNBC and Kalshi have a commercial relationship that includes customer acquisition and a minority investment.

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