Key Takeaways
- Coinbase became the first U.S.-regulated FCM offering global crypto derivatives access.
- CFTC staff action supports Coinbase’s regulated route to global crypto options and perpetual futures liquidity.
- Deribit’s more than $31 billion in bitcoin options open interest highlights the scale of the market Coinbase is targeting.
Coinbase Opens Regulated Access to Global Crypto Derivatives
Crypto exchange Coinbase (Nasdaq: COIN) announced on May 29, 2026, that Coinbase Financial Markets now offers U.S. clients regulated access to global crypto derivatives, including crypto perpetual futures and options. The move follows Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) staff action tied to products listed on Deribit FZE, Coinbase’s affiliated foreign board of trade.
Institutional clients can begin onboarding immediately through Coinbase Financial Markets, the company’s registered Futures Commission Merchant (FCM). Access initially includes Deribit options, with Coinbase planning to add crypto perpetual futures, broader collateral support, and additional derivatives products over time. While the launch is currently limited to institutions, Coinbase said retail access is planned for a later phase.
Coinbase said:
“Coinbase Financial Markets is now the first and only US-regulated FCM offering access to global crypto derivatives markets, including crypto perpetual futures and options.”
For U.S. institutions, the practical shift is market access. Coinbase says crypto derivatives represent about 80% of global crypto trading volume, with perpetual futures and options driving much of that activity. Deribit also had more than $31 billion in bitcoin options open interest as of May 28, according to Coinbase’s cited Deribit data. That scale makes the approval relevant for hedging, basis trading, and volatility strategies tied to BTC.
US Oversight Reaches Global Crypto Derivatives Markets
Regulatory mechanics anchor the launch. CFTC staff confirmed that certain crypto asset perpetual contracts described in its letter may qualify as foreign futures under Commission Regulation 30.1. Staff also issued a no-action position covering certain transfers of customer-owned digital commodities and payment stablecoins to a foreign broker affiliate for margin, subject to conditions.
The $2.9 billion acquisition of Deribit closed in August 2025 after the transaction was announced earlier that year. According to Coinbase, Deribit recorded more than $185 billion in trading volume in July 2025 and held roughly $60 billion in platform open interest at the time. Crypto-market reporting has also highlighted Deribit’s role in large BTC options expiries, showing how options positioning can influence short-term market structure.
Referring to the global market for crypto perpetual futures and options, Coinbase stressed that U.S. customers have long lacked a regulated access point. The Nasdaq-listed crypto platform said:
“This is a multi-trillion dollar market in annual trading volume that US customers have had no regulated way to access.”
The initial focus remains on institutional adoption. The launch will test whether regulated U.S. infrastructure can attract meaningful BTC options and perpetual futures activity from firms that already trade global crypto derivatives, or from those that avoided the market because access was fragmented.





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