Key Highlights
- Kraken introduced perpetual futures contracts for qualified American traders using Bitnomial, the CFTC-regulated platform acquired by Kraken this year
- Nine leading digital currencies are available for trading, including Bitcoin, Ether, Solana, XRP, and Dogecoin
- Global perpetual futures markets recorded more than $60 trillion in volume during 2025, with most activity occurring on international platforms
- Earlier regulatory approvals included Kalshi’s Bitcoin perpetual contract and CFTC guidance enabling Coinbase’s market access in May 2026
- The CFTC’s temporary no-action letter permitting conversion of standard futures into perpetuals will conclude at the end of June 2026
Kraken has introduced perpetual futures contracts for qualified American traders via its Kraken Pro trading interface. These instruments are offered through Bitnomial, a federally sanctioned derivatives exchange that became part of Payward, Kraken’s holding company, during April 2026.
Perpetual futures contracts — commonly referred to as “perps” in trading circles — enable market participants to establish long or short exposures to underlying assets without direct ownership. These instruments differ from traditional futures by lacking predetermined expiration dates. Traders can maintain their positions indefinitely, provided they satisfy ongoing margin obligations.
The initial offering encompasses nine digital currencies: Bitcoin, Ether, Solana, XRP, Cardano, Chainlink, Dogecoin, Litecoin, and Avalanche. Users can oversee these derivatives alongside their current spot holdings, margin positions, and CME-based futures contracts through a unified account interface.
Based on Kraken’s analysis, perpetual futures instruments produced upwards of $60 trillion in worldwide transaction volume throughout 2025. The overwhelming majority of this trading occurred on overseas exchanges outside US regulatory jurisdiction.
Shifting Regulatory Landscape in the United States
This product launch arrives after multiple regulatory developments orchestrated by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. During May 2026, the CFTC granted approval for Kalshi’s Bitcoin-based perpetual futures product. Simultaneously, the commission published guidance that facilitated Coinbase’s ability to provide American traders with access to international perpetual and options trading venues.
Kalshi rolled out its perpetual contracts on the identical date it secured CFTC authorization. The exchange documented more than $1 billion in transaction volume during its inaugural seven days of operation.
Additionally, the CFTC released a no-action letter this past Friday evening. This directive permits regulated trading venues to eliminate expiration requirements from futures contracts engineered to function as perpetuals. Exchanges must satisfy specific investor safeguard criteria, including alerting traders holding active positions and providing opportunities to close them. This temporary relief expires at June 2026’s conclusion.
CFTC Chairman Michael Selig announced in January that the commission would leverage its current statutory powers to facilitate perpetual futures trading. He noted that years of regulatory ambiguity had driven substantial trading activity to foreign platforms. Subsequently, during the Milken Institute’s Future of Finance gathering, Selig indicated the CFTC was actively developing a comprehensive regulatory structure for authentic perpetual futures within American markets.
Kraken’s Strategic Development Timeline
Kraken has systematically expanded its derivatives operations throughout the preceding year. The exchange purchased NinjaTrader during May 2025 and completed the Bitnomial acquisition twelve months afterward. CME-listed cryptocurrency futures were integrated in July 2025, followed by margin trading capabilities for American customers in early June 2026.
John Palmer, who oversees derivatives at Kraken, suggested adoption patterns may mirror those observed with spot Bitcoin ETFs — beginning with institutional trading firms, then progressing to investment advisers and portfolio managers following their internal due diligence procedures.
Kraken announced intentions to broaden both the selection of available contracts and acceptable collateral types in future iterations.



