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Yesterday β€” 16 December 2025Main stream

Shiba Inu Scores US Regulated Derivatives Entry Via Coinbase

16 December 2025 at 13:00

According to reports, Coinbase has launched regulated futures linked to Shiba Inu, opening the token to trading on a US derivatives venue.

The new products include perpetual-style contracts and monthly futures tied to what Coinbase calls the 1k SHIB index (a 1,000 token index), with trading scheduled to run 24/7.

The rollout began on December 5, 2025, as part of a broader push by the exchange to add altcoin derivative listings under US rules.

Regulated Futures Hit The Market

Reports have disclosed that the perpetual contracts operate like offshore swaps in form but are offered through Coinbase’s regulated platform and are designed to include a funding-rate mechanism to keep prices close to spot.

Now live: Trade US Perpetual-Style Futures for all altcoins on Coinbase Derivatives, available 24/7.

β†’ Shiba Inu $SHIB β†’ Avalanche $AVAX β†’ Bitcoin Cash $BCH β†’ Cardano $ADA β†’ Chainlink $LINK β†’ Dogecoin $DOGE β†’ Hedera $HBAR β†’ Litecoin $LTC β†’ Polkadot $DOT β†’ SUI $SUI →… pic.twitter.com/yjS2XsQ2jN

β€” Coinbase Markets πŸ›‘ (@CoinbaseMarkets) December 15, 2025

Monthly contracts were made available as an initial phase. Clearing and settlement are handled inside systems compatible with US oversight, and the products are described as compliant with Commodity Futures Trading Commission frameworks.

What Traders And Institutions Might Do

Market participants say having regulated futures can change who trades a token. Institutional desks and some large funds often need regulated venues and clearer custody paths before they increase exposure.

Added liquidity and round-the-clock pricing may attract more active traders, and that could raise volume. At the same time, access to futures also makes it easier to bet against the token, which can push volatility up. Reports note that immediate moves in spot markets have been mixed, showing that access to derivatives does not automatically lift the token’s price.

Because SHIB has regulated futures on Coinbase (β€œ1k Shib Index”), it qualifies for spot ETF consideration under the same SEC pathway Bitcoin and Ethereum followed.

The big picture for SHIB

β€’SHIB now joins the β€œETF-watchlist club” with other futures-backed cryptos. β€’If/when… pic.twitter.com/cZPxUWWhBn

β€” π‹π”π‚πˆπ„ (@LucieSHIB) September 18, 2025

Market Context And Exchange Strategy

Coinbase’s decision follows steps the exchange has taken to grow its derivatives arm. Company filings and public letters in 2025 framed derivatives growth as a strategic priority, and the firm has pursued deals and product launches to expand those capabilities.

One notable deal disclosed earlier involved an agreement valued at close to $3 billion to strengthen derivatives know-how and infrastructure. This background helps explain why Coinbase is offering altcoin futures that trade continuously, under a regulated roof.

Featured image from Gemini, chart from TradingView

Before yesterdayMain stream

CFTC Launches Pilot Program Allowing Bitcoin To Be Used as Collateral In Derivatives Markets

8 December 2025 at 17:12

Bitcoin Magazine

CFTC Launches Pilot Program Allowing Bitcoin To Be Used as Collateral In Derivatives Markets

The Commodity Futures Trading Commission announced the launch of a U.S. digital assets pilot program that will allow bitcoin, ethereum and the stablecoin USDC to be used as collateral in regulated derivatives markets, marking another major policy shift in how U.S. regulators approach tokenized assets.

The move includes new guidance for tokenized collateral, a limited no-action framework for futures commission merchants (FCMs), and the withdrawal of legacy restrictions that the agency said are no longer relevant following passage of the GENIUS Act.

Acting CFTC Chair Caroline Pham said the program is designed to expand the use of digital assets in regulated markets while maintaining oversight and customer protections.

β€œAmericans deserve safe U.S. markets as an alternative to offshore platforms,” Pham said in a statement. β€œToday, I am launching a U.S. digital assets pilot program for tokenized collateral that establishes clear guardrails to protect customer assets and provides enhanced CFTC monitoring and reporting.”

Bitcoin and other crypto as a pilot

Under the pilot, FCMs will be temporarily allowed to accept a narrow set of digital assets like Bitcoin as customer margin, according to a CFTC announcement.Β 

During the first three months of participation, firms will be required to submit weekly reports to the CFTC detailing the total amount of digital assets held in customer accounts, broken out by asset and account class.Β 

Companies must also notify regulators of any material incident involving the use of digital collateral.

The agency said the reporting requirement is intended to give staff real-time insight into operational risks while allowing firms controlled access to tokenized collateral.

Last week, the CFTC allowed federally regulated spot crypto trading in the U.S. for the first time, with Bitnomial set to launch its exchange next week under CFTC oversight.Β 

Pham said CFTC-registered venues will list spot crypto products, enabling retail and institutional traders to access spot, futures, options, and perpetuals on a single regulated platform.

Alongside the pilot program, the CFTC’s Market Participants Division, Division of Market Oversight and Division of Clearing and Risk issued formal guidance on how tokenized assets should be evaluated within existing regulatory frameworks.

The guidance emphasizes that CFTC rules are β€œtechnology neutral” and that tokenized assets should be assessed individually under existing policies rather than treated as a separate asset class.

The framework applies to tokenized real-world assets such as U.S. Treasuries and money market funds. It outlines standards for legal enforceability and things like custody and control.

The agency also issued a no-action position for FCMs that accept non-securities digital assets as margin, including payment stablecoins.Β 

The relief allows firms to incorporate qualifying digital assets into customer accounts while clarifying how capital and segregation rules apply under the new regime.

Crypto industry applause

The CFTC formally withdrew Staff Advisory No. 20-34, which previously restricted how virtual currencies could be held in customer accounts. The advisory had been in place since 2020 and had limited the operational use of digital assets as collateral.

The agency said developments in digital markets and the enactment of the GENIUS Act made the advisory obsolete.

Crypto and fintech firms quickly welcomed the decision, saying the changes offer long-awaited regulatory certainty.

Coinbase Chief Legal Officer Paul Grewal said the move confirms the industry’s belief that stablecoins and digital assets can reduce risk and improve efficiency in financial markets, according to a CFTC announcement.Β 

Circle President Heath Tarbert also chimed in and said the changes would reduce settlement risk and friction in derivatives trading by enabling near real-time margin settlement.

Crypto.com CEO Kris Marszalek said the announcement would allow tokenized collateral to be used in U.S. markets for the first time at scale, adding that it would support 24/7 trading in regulated derivatives products.

This post CFTC Launches Pilot Program Allowing Bitcoin To Be Used as Collateral In Derivatives Markets first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.

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