Regulatory red tape ripped away from crypto wallets, granting direct access to derivatives

Crypto wallets used to mean one thing: self-custody. Users held their keys, owned their assets, and stayed off the radar of traditional finance.

Phantom’s Mar. 17 no-action relief from the CFTC’s Market Participants Division rewrites that definition.

The letter allows Phantom to serve as the consumer interface for regulated derivatives without registering as an introducing broker, provided registered futures commission merchants, introducing brokers, and designated contract markets handle the actual customer relationships, custody, and clearing.

On Jan. 29, CFTC Chairman Michael Selig announced the agency would pursue “clear and unambiguous safe harbors for software developers” and explore onshoring perpetual derivatives.

On Mar. 11, the CFTC and the SEC signed a memorandum of understanding to harmonize oversight and reduce duplicative oversight.

One day later, the CFTC launched an advance notice of proposed rulemaking on prediction markets and issued a staff advisory on event contracts.

Five days later, Phantom received its relief. The sequence positions the letter as an early test case in a broader pro-clarity, pro-onshoring regulatory push.

A timeline showing five CFTC regulatory actions from January to March 2026 that positioned Phantom’s no-action relief as part of a broader pro-clarity agenda.

Separation of interface and risk

The CFTC’s letter does something structurally novel by separating interface risk from market risk.

Phantom can display market data, aggregate positions, product information, and order entry for Commission-regulated derivatives. It can market those relationships, charge transaction-based fees to users, and receive revenue sharing from collaborators.

However, users must remain direct customers or members of the registered firms, their collateral stays with the designated clearing organization or FCM, and Phantom cannot take custody of customer assets, generate express buy or sell signals, or exercise routing discretion.

The wallet serves as the software layer, and the registered firm maintains the legal customer relationship and handles custody and clearing.

The regulator tolerates the split as long as the software stays passive and the guardrails stay strong.

Phantom must provide conflict and risk disclosures, follow communications rules as if it were an introducing broker, avoid certain promotional practices, maintain records, and enter written undertakings with collaborators that make Phantom and each collaborator jointly and severally liable for violations tied to the covered activities.

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This arrangement exposes two competing theories.

The bull case holds that wallets become multi-product financial operating systems, bundling self-custody, payments, trading, and access to regulated markets into a single consumer experience.

Juniper Research projects global digital wallet users will rise from 4.4 billion in 2025 to more than 6 billion by 2030, with differentiation hinging on value-added capabilities and “superapp features.”

If the CFTC’s software-safe-harbor logic advances incrementally, wallets could compete with brokerages and exchange apps for retail trading distribution.

The bear case holds that Phantom stays a narrow one-off. Congress tightens event contract rules, state litigation fractures the market, and future Commission guidance declines to generalize the relief.

Democratic lawmakers introduced the BETS OFF Act on Mar. 17 to ban prediction market bets on military operations and other sensitive government actions.

The same day, Arizona filed criminal charges against Kalshi, arguing it ran an illegal gambling business despite Kalshi’s claim that federal commodities law preempts state gambling regulation.

The federal door may be opening while the surrounding politics grow more hostile.

The prediction market wedge

Prediction markets supply the most politically salient wedge for the wallet-superapp model, but the regulatory template extends beyond them.

The Phantom letter expressly covers event contracts, perpetual contracts, and other Commission-regulated derivatives.

FalconX’s February market note put 2025 prediction market volumes at $64 billion, said January 2026 alone reached $27 billion across tracked venues, and estimated the market could reach more than $325 billion in 2026.

In December, Kalshi raised $1 billion at an $11 billion valuation, with weekly trading volumes topping $1 billion, up more than 1,000% from 2024 levels.

In October, Robinhood’s event contract revenues were annualizing to more than $200 million.

As a result, mainstream financial infrastructure is responding.

On Mar. 10, Nasdaq and CME executives publicly called for clearer, durable rules as prediction markets draw retail traders and Wall Street interest.