The CFTC's approval of perpetual futures has wiped billions from exchange stocks, even as ICE, Cboe and CME all posted record quarterly revenue.
The CFTC's approval of perpetual futures has wiped billions from exchange stocks, even as ICE, Cboe and CME all posted record quarterly revenue.

The CFTC's approval of perpetual futures has wiped $X billion from exchange stocks, even as ICE, Cboe and CME all posted record quarterly revenue.
The Commodity Futures Trading Commission's approval of perpetual futures contracts — derivatives that let traders hold leveraged positions indefinitely — has triggered a selloff in traditional exchange operators that appears disconnected from their underlying financial performance. Intercontinental Exchange shares have fallen 13.5% this year to $142.22, while Cboe Global Markets has dropped 17.5% in the past month and CME Group 10.5%, even as the S&P 500 gained nearly 8%.
"The incumbents like us, we want to make sure that we understand the rules and that it's fair competition," ICE Chief Executive Officer Jeffrey Sprecher said at a Bernstein conference in late May, reflecting industry concern about the regulatory shift.
All three exchange operators reported record revenue in the first quarter, driven by elevated volatility and high trading volumes. Cboe generates a low- to mid-double-digit percentage of net revenue from retail zero-day options trading on the S&P 500, according to Barclays estimates — precisely the business that perpetuals could cannibalize. Yet a Cboe spokesperson said the company does not view the CFTC's approval as a "meaningful risk," noting that "perpetual futures and options are fundamentally different."
The regulatory shift opens the door for crypto-native platforms to offer products that compete directly with traditional exchange offerings. Kalshi, the CFTC-regulated prediction market platform, launched the first US perpetual futures contract on Bitcoin on June 3 under the ticker BTCPERP, with plans to add Ethereum, Solana, XRP and Dogecoin pending further approvals. Offshore perpetual futures trading volume has exceeded $90 trillion annually as of 2026, up from $28 trillion in 2023, according to industry data, underscoring the scale of the market that US regulators have now opened to domestic investors.
Why perpetuals spook investors
Perpetual futures differ from traditional derivatives in a critical way: they have no expiration date. Traders can hold positions indefinitely as long as they maintain margin, with leverage reaching 100 times posted collateral at some crypto exchanges. The structure has made perps the dominant trading instrument in crypto, often showing nearly 10 times the volume of spot trading at exchanges that offer both.
CME Group Chief Executive Officer Terrence Duffy expressed grave concerns about the product structure at a Piper Sandler conference last week. "I have grave concerns with the way these contracts are set up," Duffy said, adding that the high leverage available to retail investors "could be a disaster waiting to happen." He noted the CFTC had not clarified whether it would allow perpetuals to expand beyond crypto.
A CFTC spokesperson said the agency would consider proposals for additional perpetual contracts on a case-by-case basis, adding that "the Commission will not hinder lawful innovation."
The case for calm
Barclays equity research analyst Ben Budish argues the market reaction is overdone. Institutional investors may avoid perpetuals because the lack of an expiration date makes them less useful for hedging and creates uncertain carrying costs. CME also holds licensing agreements with S&P Dow Jones Global Indices for derivatives tied to the S&P 500, providing a structural moat.
Previous attempts to introduce perpetual-style products in the US have failed to gain traction. CME already offers "spot-quoted futures" on Bitcoin and the S&P 500 that provide similar leverage with traditional expiration mechanics. Coinbase launched a Bitcoin perpetual-style future last year with a five-year expiration designed to track spot prices — a product that has not disrupted existing volumes.
Longer term, prediction markets could pose a more credible threat if they grow large enough to serve institutional risk-management needs, Budish said. An insurance company might hedge climate risk through prediction contracts, or an institutional investor might bet on corporate revenue outcomes without taking directional stock exposure. "There are a million ways to game this all out," he said.
For now, the selloff in exchange stocks reflects fear of disruption rather than evidence of it. With record revenue, licensing protections and structural differences between perpetuals and traditional options, the panic appears premature — though the CFTC's next moves will determine whether that remains the case.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.