Crypto & Web3·Jun 13, 2026

Perpetual futures could become crypto's next ETF moment

John Palmer, head of derivatives at Kraken, said he expects sophisticated traders to lead adoption of newly approved U.S. perpetual futures, with broader institutional participation likely to follow over time.

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Perpetual futures could become crypto's next ETF moment
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John Palmer, head of derivatives at Kraken, said he expects sophisticated traders to lead adoption of newly approved U.S. perpetual futures, with broader institutional participation likely to follow over time.

  • There could be more additional governance, depending on the entity type," he said.
  • "Those will typically require them to move a little bit slower."He added that this was the "same thing we saw with the bitcoin ETFs.
  • Unlike dated futures, which require traders to manage expirations and contract rolls, perps allow positions to remain open indefinitely."I think it's a simple derivative structure compared to some of the nuances of dealing with dated futures," he said.
  • Despite crypto derivatives generating trillions of dollars in annual volume globally, Palmer said the U.S. market remains in its early stages."We're at the beginning of the game," he said.
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Jun 13, 2026, 2:00 p.m. 3 min read(Robb Miller/Unsplash)SummaryRegulated perpetual futures, long dominant on offshore crypto venues, are starting to debut in the U.S., with Kraken set to launch them on Kraken Pro after securing CFTC-regulated licenses through its NinjaTrader and Bitnomial acquisitions.John Palmer, head of derivatives at Kraken, said he expects sophisticated proprietary traders and retail users to adopt U.S. perps first, with investment advisers and large asset managers following more slowly.Proponents say perpetual futures’ lack of expirations and simpler structure compared with dated futures, along with eventual use of crypto as collateral, could transform the still-nascent U.S. crypto derivatives market and reduce reliance on offshore platforms.The rollout of regulated perpetual futures in the U.S. could follow a familiar path to the one taken by spot bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) in seeking mass adoption.That's according to a Kraken executive overseeing the exchange's global derivatives business, who said sophisticated traders are likely to be the first institutional users of the newly approved products, while larger asset managers and investment advisers will take longer to enter the market."When I think about those participants in trading, typically the first movers are going to be the ones that are more sophisticated in nature," John Palmer, head of derivatives at Kraken, said in an interview. "So they're either already connected to exchanges and trading themselves in a proprietary manner."The comments come as the U.S. derivatives market prepares for the arrival of regulated "true" perpetual futures, a product that has long dominated offshore crypto trading venues such as Hyperliquid (HYPE). Perpetual futures, or perps, allow traders to maintain leveraged positions without an expiration date, unlike traditional futures contracts that must eventually be rolled into a new contract.Globally, perpetual futures account for the vast majority of crypto derivatives volume, yet U.S. traders have historically had limited access due to regulatory restrictions.Kraken recently entered the U.S. regulated derivatives market through its acquisitions of NinjaTrader and Bitnomial, giving it access to futures commission merchant, exchange and clearing licenses regulated by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC). The company expects to launch perpetual futures on Kraken Pro in the coming weeks.Palmer said broader institutional adoption will likely take time, drawing a comparison to the launch of spot bitcoin ETFs in January 2024."When you take further steps back in the asset management chain, then you have investment committees. There could be more additional governance, depending on the entity type," he said. "Those will typically require them to move a little bit slower."He added that this was the "same thing we saw with the bitcoin ETFs. We saw retail, we saw sophisticated customers really enter that market very quickly, and then we slowly started to see investment advisors, asset managers enter the space in a trailing fashion because they had to go through their own due diligence and their own corporate governance structures.""I think we will see the same thing for perps," he said.The comparison may indicate how much the U.S. crypto derivatives market could change over the next several years. While spot bitcoin ETFs opened the door for traditional investors to gain exposure to bitcoin through brokerage accounts, regulated perpetual futures could give both retail and institutional traders access to one of crypto's most popular trading instruments without needing to use offshore venues.Prediction market platform Kalshi, which launched U.S. perpetual futures last week, said on Wednesday that it already crossed $1 billion in trading volume.Palmer argued that one reason perpetual futures became so successful outside the U.S. is their simplicity. Unlike dated futures, which require traders to manage expirations and contract rolls, perps allow positions to remain open indefinitely."I think it's a simple derivative structure compared to some of the nuances of dealing with dated futures," he said. "If I buy a June [future], then it expires, and if I want to keep my position on, I have to roll it."Kraken believes removing those complexities — and eventually allowing crypto assets to be used as collateral — could help bring U.S. traders closer to the experience available in international markets, he said.For now, the company sees the launch of regulated perps as just the beginning. Despite crypto derivatives generating trillions of dollars in annual volume globally, Palmer said the U.S. market remains in its early stages."We're at the beginning of the game," he said. "We're at the national anthem still."12345678910

Integrity note  ·  Xela does not rewrite or paraphrase article content. The excerpt above is the source publication's own words, sanitized for display. For the full piece — including any quotes, charts, or images — read it at CoinDesk. Xela's rewritten version is off for this story, so there's no editorial angle attached — you're getting the source's reporting unfiltered. When the rewrite is on, we add a What this means block underneath with the operator/trader takeaway.

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