Udesh Jha, chief risk officer at Kalshi, confirmed the company is in advanced discussions with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) to greenlight these new asset classes. Unlike traditional futures, these perpetual contracts allow investors to maintain positions indefinitely, offering significant leverage that has drawn both massive trading interest and sharp regulatory scrutiny.
Traditional exchange giants, including CME Group, view the expansion as a direct threat to their core business models. CME has already initiated legal action against the CFTC over the approval of perpetuals, with outgoing CEO Terry Duffy labeling the products a potential disaster for retail investors. Critics argue that the high leverage—sometimes reaching 50 times the contract value—creates extreme volatility risks for participants who may underestimate the complexity of these instruments. Despite the pushback, Kalshi remains focused on broadening its footprint, eyeing future opportunities in individual stocks and broad-based indexes to capitalize on the shift from offshore platforms to regulated U.S. venues.
Comments (0)
No comments yet. Be the first!