Source: Cryptonews
Original Title: U.S. CFTC launches pilot for tokenized derivatives collateral
Original Link:
The Commodity Futures Trading Commission has opened the door for tokenized assets to be used across U.S. derivatives markets.
Summary
CFTC has introduced a supervised pilot that lets tokenized assets serve as collateral in U.S. derivatives markets.
The new framework gives firms clear guidance on handling tokenized real-world assets.
Industry leaders see the move as a step toward safer, more efficient market infrastructure.
The commission has launched a digital assets pilot program covering Bitcoin, Ethereum, USDC, and tokenized real-world assets.
In its announcement, the agency said the program allows registered futures commission merchants to accept Bitcoin, Ethereum, USDC, and tokenized real-world assets as margin collateral under direct CFTC oversight.
A controlled framework for digital collateral
Acting Chair Caroline Pham described the rollout as a structured way to bring crypto activity onshore after years of volatility on offshore exchanges. She added that the pilot is meant to blend innovation with long-standing market protections.
Under the program, firms must provide weekly reports showing the assets held in customer accounts and disclose any operational issues. The CFTC also released updated guidance confirming that its rules are technology-neutral, meaning tokenized Treasuries, money-market funds, and other RWAs can fit within existing collateral standards if custody and valuation controls are strong enough.
The agency withdrew Staff Advisory 20-34 at the same time. Regulators said the advisory no longer reflects today’s market now that tokenization has advanced. Removing the advisory lifts earlier restrictions that had limited firms’ ability to hold digital assets as collateral.
The new pilot builds on its crypto sprint initiative and considers recommendations from its Digital Asset Markets Subcommittee. The program is designed to test operational resilience, collateral handling, and market impact in a controlled environment.
While the first phase is limited, it creates a formal path for tokenized assets, from stablecoins to tokenized Treasuries, to operate inside the world’s largest derivatives market under clear rules. For the CFTC, it marks a shift toward a market structure where tokenized collateral and 24/7 settlement can exist within the same regulatory framework that governs traditional futures.
Industry reaction and the push for efficient settlement
Industry leaders welcomed the change. A major compliance platform’s legal chief highlighted that tokenized assets offer faster and safer settlement. Industry participants called the move an important step for stablecoins in regulated markets.
Crypto executives said the program gives U.S. firms clarity that other regions already enjoy. Technology providers said the shift should improve capital efficiency and open the door for wider use of tokenized money-market funds and institutional stablecoins.
The announcement also lands ahead of major banks meeting with U.S. senators to discuss crypto legislation. Tokenized collateral is expected to feature heavily. In a separate development, the SEC has closed its multi-year inquiry into tokenized RWA issuers, reducing regulatory uncertainty for the sector.
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WalletDetective
· 12-12 04:30
The era of decentralized collateral has arrived, and this time the US officials are really serious.
View OriginalReply0
bridge_anxiety
· 12-11 23:04
The CFTC's trial run is really interesting. Are they finally taking on-chain assets seriously? Whether they can break the deadlock mostly depends on how the SEC feels.
View OriginalReply0
AirdropLicker
· 12-10 22:21
CFTC's move is good, finally taking on-chain assets seriously; otherwise, we might have to wait another ten years.
View OriginalReply0
TokenToaster
· 12-09 05:52
The CFTC is being pretty aggressive this time. They're finally starting to take on-chain assets seriously.
View OriginalReply0
ProveMyZK
· 12-09 05:52
CFTC is getting serious about this. The tokenized collateral pilot is starting, and compliance still needs to be addressed step by step.
View OriginalReply0
TradingNightmare
· 12-09 05:49
Oh my god, the CFTC is finally not so old-fashioned anymore and is starting to experiment with tokenized collateral? If this actually gets implemented, I'll eat shit.
View OriginalReply0
OnchainArchaeologist
· 12-09 05:49
Oh no, is the CFTC finally getting serious? This move with tokenized collateral is about to change the game rules.
View OriginalReply0
SmartContractRebel
· 12-09 05:45
The CFTC is finally taking action, which should have happened long ago. However, real implementation will depend on follow-up enforcement—let’s hope it’s not just empty promises again.
View OriginalReply0
GweiTooHigh
· 12-09 05:28
Is the CFTC really getting serious this time? Tokenized collateral is going live on the derivatives market—so many institutions are going to follow suit. Feels like the market is about to explode again.
U.S. CFTC Launches Pilot for Tokenized Derivatives Collateral
Source: Cryptonews Original Title: U.S. CFTC launches pilot for tokenized derivatives collateral Original Link: The Commodity Futures Trading Commission has opened the door for tokenized assets to be used across U.S. derivatives markets.
Summary
The commission has launched a digital assets pilot program covering Bitcoin, Ethereum, USDC, and tokenized real-world assets.
In its announcement, the agency said the program allows registered futures commission merchants to accept Bitcoin, Ethereum, USDC, and tokenized real-world assets as margin collateral under direct CFTC oversight.
A controlled framework for digital collateral
Acting Chair Caroline Pham described the rollout as a structured way to bring crypto activity onshore after years of volatility on offshore exchanges. She added that the pilot is meant to blend innovation with long-standing market protections.
Under the program, firms must provide weekly reports showing the assets held in customer accounts and disclose any operational issues. The CFTC also released updated guidance confirming that its rules are technology-neutral, meaning tokenized Treasuries, money-market funds, and other RWAs can fit within existing collateral standards if custody and valuation controls are strong enough.
The agency withdrew Staff Advisory 20-34 at the same time. Regulators said the advisory no longer reflects today’s market now that tokenization has advanced. Removing the advisory lifts earlier restrictions that had limited firms’ ability to hold digital assets as collateral.
The new pilot builds on its crypto sprint initiative and considers recommendations from its Digital Asset Markets Subcommittee. The program is designed to test operational resilience, collateral handling, and market impact in a controlled environment.
While the first phase is limited, it creates a formal path for tokenized assets, from stablecoins to tokenized Treasuries, to operate inside the world’s largest derivatives market under clear rules. For the CFTC, it marks a shift toward a market structure where tokenized collateral and 24/7 settlement can exist within the same regulatory framework that governs traditional futures.
Industry reaction and the push for efficient settlement
Industry leaders welcomed the change. A major compliance platform’s legal chief highlighted that tokenized assets offer faster and safer settlement. Industry participants called the move an important step for stablecoins in regulated markets.
Crypto executives said the program gives U.S. firms clarity that other regions already enjoy. Technology providers said the shift should improve capital efficiency and open the door for wider use of tokenized money-market funds and institutional stablecoins.
The announcement also lands ahead of major banks meeting with U.S. senators to discuss crypto legislation. Tokenized collateral is expected to feature heavily. In a separate development, the SEC has closed its multi-year inquiry into tokenized RWA issuers, reducing regulatory uncertainty for the sector.