The most ambitious expansion of US-regulated crypto derivatives in history is happening in real time, and it’s moving faster than anyone expected.
Kalshi, the CFTC-regulated prediction market platform, launched Bitcoin perpetual futures on June 3. Ethereum perpetuals followed on June 4. XRP perpetuals went live this week. Solana perpetuals launched on June 11. In approximately one week, Kalshi has rolled out four major crypto perpetual futures products, all under CFTC regulation, all with zero trading fees during the launch period.
The pace of expansion is what makes this story significant. The crypto industry spent years lobbying US regulators to permit perpetual futures domestically. Offshore platforms like Hyperliquid built billion-dollar businesses serving US traders who weren’t supposed to access perps through onshore venues. The CFTC’s approval of Kalshi’s Bitcoin perpetuals was supposed to be the start of a slow, methodical rollout of additional products.
Instead, Kalshi is launching new contracts every few days. The platform has filed CFTC certification requests for Dogecoin, Stellar, Shiba Inu, and Hedera perpetuals, with the CEO suggesting the approvals could land in the coming weeks.
For US traders who have spent years routing through offshore platforms, this represents the fastest expansion of regulated crypto derivatives access in US history. For Hyperliquid and other offshore venues, it represents a competitive threat that’s materialising much faster than the comfortable assumptions about regulatory lag would have suggested.
The Pace of Approvals Tells the Story
The CFTC’s willingness to approve perpetual futures contracts in rapid succession reveals something important about how regulators view this product category.
Under the current Trump administration, the CFTC has taken a notably crypto-friendly posture. Each individual perpetual futures contract requires separate regulatory review and approval. Approval of one perp doesn’t automatically extend to other assets. But Kalshi has navigated four approvals in approximately one week, suggesting the agency has internalised a framework that allows for rapid clearance of additional contracts once the base infrastructure is in place.
Kalshi CEO Tarek Mansour framed the move in ambitious terms during a CNBC appearance, calling perpetual futures “the purest form of trading.” That language suggests Kalshi sees perpetuals not as a niche product addition but as a foundational expansion that will define the platform’s future.
The company has been clear about its competitive intent. Mansour explicitly framed the products as bringing crypto perpetuals “to America” with full CFTC oversight, an obvious reference to the years that US traders have spent accessing these products through offshore venues. The competitive positioning targets Hyperliquid, Binance, Bybit, and other international exchanges that have dominated the perpetual futures market.
How Kalshi’s Perps Differ From Offshore Alternatives
The structural differences between Kalshi’s regulated perpetuals and offshore perps matter for understanding which traders will use which platforms.
Leverage is the most obvious difference. Offshore platforms typically offer leverage ranging from 20x to as high as 250x. Kalshi’s CFTC-regulated products operate with significantly lower leverage limits, in line with the agency’s approach to retail derivatives products. A trader who wants 100x leverage on a Bitcoin position will still need to access offshore platforms. A trader comfortable with 5x or 10x will find Kalshi’s products competitive.
The regulatory framework provides genuine consumer protections that offshore platforms don’t offer. CFTC-regulated platforms operate under disclosure requirements, customer fund segregation rules, and oversight mechanisms designed to protect retail investors. If Kalshi were to face operational issues, customers would have legal recourse and protections that simply don’t exist when trading on offshore venues.
Pricing data comes from CF Benchmarks, the institutional-grade reference rate provider that already supplies prices for CME’s crypto futures products. The use of established institutional pricing infrastructure means Kalshi’s perpetuals reference the same prices that pension funds, asset managers, and other regulated entities already rely on for their crypto exposure calculations.
The zero trading fees during the launch period are a competitive weapon. Offshore platforms typically charge 0.02% to 0.05% per trade. Kalshi’s zero-fee offering, even temporary, lets active traders execute strategies that would be unprofitable at competitor pricing. The fees will eventually return, but the launch period is generating active user adoption that establishes positioning.
The Implications for Hyperliquid and Offshore Venues
Hyperliquid’s response to the regulated perp expansion will define the next chapter of competition in this category.
The Dubai-based decentralised perp platform processes more daily revenue than Ethereum and Solana combined. Its $7 billion in open interest ranks third globally behind only Binance and Bybit. The platform’s $620 million annualised revenue and three pending ETF filings reflect a business operating at institutional scale.
Hyperliquid’s competitive advantages remain substantial even with Kalshi expanding. Higher leverage. No KYC friction. Faster listing of exotic trading pairs. A decentralised governance model that can adapt faster than any regulated entity. And global access without the geographic restrictions that come with CFTC regulation.
But the regulated alternative now exists for the largest categories of crypto perpetuals. Bitcoin, Ethereum, XRP, and Solana represent the most-traded perp markets globally. A US trader who previously had to choose between accessing Hyperliquid for these products or going without them entirely now has a regulated option. The product differentiation that justified offshore platform usage narrows significantly.
CME CEO Terry Duffy’s recent warning that crypto perpetuals could be a “disaster waiting to happen” reflects the competitive concern from the incumbent regulated derivatives venue. CME’s regulated Bitcoin futures business is now under pressure from Kalshi’s rapidly expanding perp offerings. ICE’s parallel interest in Hyperliquid’s model demonstrates that traditional exchange operators see perpetuals as a category they need to compete in, not avoid.
What’s Next in the Kalshi Pipeline
The CFTC certification requests Kalshi has filed reveal where the product expansion is heading.
Dogecoin perpetuals could arrive shortly. Despite the token’s meme origins, DOGE is one of the most actively traded cryptocurrencies globally with deep liquidity and consistent retail interest. A regulated Dogecoin perp would create the first onshore venue for leveraged DOGE trading at scale.
Stellar, Shiba Inu, and Hedera contracts are pending. The selection reflects active trading volume rather than market cap rankings. Each of these tokens has substantial perp trading on offshore platforms, suggesting Kalshi sees opportunity in bringing that volume onshore.
The broader pipeline could eventually include over a dozen cryptocurrencies based on Kalshi’s stated ambitions. If the pace of approvals continues, US traders will have regulated perpetual futures access to most major cryptocurrencies within months.
The platform’s expansion beyond crypto into traditional financial perpetuals is the longer-term play. Equity index perpetuals, commodity perpetuals, and currency perpetuals are all potential future products. The infrastructure being built for crypto perps could eventually support a much broader derivatives marketplace.
What This Means for XRP Specifically
The XRP perpetual launch carries particular significance given XRP’s recent price action and institutional positioning.
XRP has been one of the most heavily shorted tokens in derivatives markets, with short positions outnumbering longs by approximately 9-to-1. The launch of a CFTC-regulated XRP perp creates a new venue for both long and short positioning, potentially attracting institutional traders who couldn’t access offshore platforms.
The product launch coincides with the CLARITY Act floor vote expected June 15-18. If the bill passes and formally classifies XRP as a commodity, Kalshi’s regulated XRP perp becomes one of the most important onshore venues for trading the token. The combination of regulatory clarity through the CLARITY Act and a regulated derivatives venue through Kalshi would represent the most comprehensive institutional infrastructure for XRP in the token’s history.
For XRP holders, the existence of a regulated US perp matters because it expands the pool of potential traders who can take positions. Institutional desks that couldn’t justify offshore exposure can now trade XRP perps domestically. Hedge funds that operate under strict compliance requirements gain access. The structural demand for XRP could increase even if the token’s spot price action remains tied to broader macro conditions.
The Bottom Line
Kalshi has launched four major crypto perpetual futures products in approximately one week. Bitcoin, Ethereum, XRP, and Solana are now available to US traders under CFTC regulation with zero trading fees during the launch period. Dogecoin, Stellar, Shiba Inu, and Hedera are pending approval. The platform that built its reputation on prediction markets is now positioned to become the largest regulated crypto derivatives venue in the United States.
The pace of expansion changes the competitive landscape immediately. Hyperliquid and other offshore platforms still maintain advantages in leverage, asset variety, and geographic reach. But the regulated alternative now exists for the largest categories of perpetual futures trading, and it’s expanding faster than anyone expected.
For US traders, the choice between Hyperliquid and Kalshi will increasingly come down to leverage requirements and regulatory preference rather than product availability. For the broader crypto derivatives market, the structural shift toward onshore regulated trading is happening in real time. The years of crypto traders being forced offshore for perpetuals access are ending. Today’s news is the latest data point in that transformation.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Cryptocurrency and derivatives trading carry significant risk, including the potential loss of more than your initial investment. Always conduct your own research before making any trading decisions.


















