- CFTC Chair Selig holds primary authority over U.S. crypto derivatives oversight.
- CME CEO criticized Selig’s crypto perp approval as CME shares came under pressure.
- Lawmakers from both parties urged Trump to nominate additional CFTC commissioners.
Michael Selig has been the CFTC chairman for less than six months. In that time, he has approved the first regulated Bitcoin perpetual futures contract, moved to vacate a Biden-era settlement with Gemini, pulled back on crypto enforcement actions, and challenged multiple states trying to crack down on prediction markets.
He has done all of this as the sole sitting member of what is legally supposed to be a five-person bipartisan commission. The remaining seats are empty, giving Selig unilateral authority over everything from Kalshi and Polymarket to oil futures to the entire $2 trillion crypto market.
The Praise and the Alarm
Crypto executives have responded warmly. Chris Perkins of 250 Digital Asset Management described his work as doing God’s work. Trump praised him on Truth Social. The Winklevoss twins helped clear the path for his nomination after voicing concerns about Trump’s initial pick for the role.
Wall Street is less enthusiastic. CME Group CEO Terrence Duffy appeared on CNBC last week after Selig approved crypto perpetual futures and said, “This could be a disaster waiting to happen.” CME’s stock dropped on the news.
Inside the CFTC itself, a half dozen current and former officials stated the agency is struggling. Staff morale is described as decimated. A fresh round of buyout offers is accelerating departures from the Division of Market Oversight, the unit responsible for overseeing derivatives exchanges. One current official said the agency simply does not have the operational capacity to handle its expanding crypto mandate.
The Political Problem
Both Republican and Democratic committee chairs overseeing the CFTC have called on Trump to nominate additional commissioners. Democrats are pushing for the same as part of ongoing crypto bill negotiations. Senator Elissa Slotkin said, “We’ve got one guy who has clear leanings toward the industry. I’ve got a problem with that.”
Selig has said he welcomes more commissioners. He has not slowed down while waiting for them.
What Is at Stake
The CLARITY Act, advancing through the Senate, would formally hand the CFTC expanded authority over crypto markets, potentially making Selig one of the most powerful financial regulators in Washington. Whether that authority lands in a one-person commission or a fully staffed bipartisan body will shape how crypto regulation in America develops for years ahead.
Related: Bitcoin’s Next Move Depends on Its Breakout From a Tight Range—Analysts
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