Gate News: A low-profile move by U.S. regulators is being reinterpreted by the market. The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) issued its first no-action letter regarding self-custody wallets, while the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) jointly classified XRP as a digital commodity with the CFTC. This combined signal opens a new pathway for XRP to enter the regulated derivatives market.
According to CFTC Letter No. 26-09 issued on March 17, Phantom Technologies Inc. can offer derivatives trading interfaces to users without holding customer funds or registering as a broker-dealer. This principle is summarized as “as long as customer assets are not held, it does not constitute a financial intermediary.” Evernorth noted that this framework aligns closely with Ripple’s long-standing push for a non-custodial settlement model, providing regulatory space for applications built on the XRP Ledger.
On the same day, the SEC and CFTC jointly released an interpretive document explicitly classifying XRP as a digital commodity, excluding it from the scope of securities regulation. Ripple’s Chief Legal Officer Stuart Alderoty responded that this determination confirms XRP’s legal status. Following the news, XRP trading activity surged significantly, with trading volume temporarily increasing by over 100%.
From an industry perspective, this regulatory development is significant in establishing a connection between non-custodial wallets and compliant derivatives markets. Qualified wallet service providers, after risk disclosures and compliance record-keeping, can serve as front-end access points for products like futures without taking on traditional intermediary roles.
Additionally, under Brian Quintenz’s leadership, the CFTC’s recent policy direction favors technological innovation and has signed a memorandum of understanding with the SEC to reduce regulatory overlap. For XRP, these developments are not short-term price catalysts but rather lay the institutional groundwork for broader integration into financial markets, especially in the areas of derivatives and on-chain finance.