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CFTC's Mike Selig Vows to End Regulation by Enforcement as He Steers US Crypto Solo
Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) Chair Mike Selig said crypto markets have “for too long” operated under uncertainty, vowing clear rules over enforcement even as he becomes the agency’s only sitting commissioner.
‘Not Regulating by Enforcement’
Selig, confirmed to lead the CFTC in December 2025, used remarks this week to draw a hard line under the previous era of U.S. crypto policy. “For too long, crypto markets have operated under uncertainty,” he said, adding that the agency is “not regulating by enforcement and opaque rules.”
The message is one Selig has repeated since taking office, and as part of his Project Crypto agenda, he recently argued that a “decelerationist” approach treated innovation as a threat, “resulted in regulation by enforcement and forced American innovators to flee the U.S. and build beyond our borders.”
Selig framed the shift as a return to fundamentals, adding that the agency’s Enforcement Division, should focus on fraud, manipulation and insider trading rather than setting policy through litigation. The stance mirrors a broader pivot in Washington, where the CFTC and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) issued a joint statement clarifying how federal securities laws apply to crypto assets.
One Commissioner, Sweeping Power
Selig’s pledge carries unusual weight because he is, for now, the CFTC’s only sitting commissioner. This effectively means that he holds key regulatory decision-making power over crypto assets, prediction markets and derivatives, concentrating authority normally divided among a five-member commission.
That said, such a degree of concentration has invited scrutiny, with Senator Elizabeth Warren recently questioning the agency’s ability to police prediction markets and crypto, raising concerns about industry capture. Bitcoin.com News reported on the oversight clash after Warren pressed federal regulators on the matter.
However, supporters have countered the narrative, stating that a single, decisive chair can finally deliver the rules the industry has demanded for years. Selig has argued for the CFTC’s exclusive regulatory authority over prediction markets, resisting efforts by individual states to assert control.
Perpetuals and Prediction Markets Move First
Under Selig’s leadership, the CFTC has already cleared the first U.S.-regulated crypto perpetual futures contract, a milestone that helped lift Hyperliquid’s HYPE token to a record near $67. Moving forward, he has said that the agency will craft rules letting U.S. investors trade perpetual futures domestically rather than on offshore exchanges.
Selig has also advanced a case-by-case framework for prediction markets, publishing a proposed rule on June 10 that applies a 90-day review and a public-interest test to event contracts. Most sports contracts would be permitted, while war, terrorism and assassination markets remain candidates for prohibition. Prediction markets hit $36.6 billion in trading volume in the first quarter of 2026, overtaking gambling for the first time.
The approach has drawn praise from President Donald Trump, who defended prediction markets and bitcoin in a Truth Social post praising Selig.
The open question now is whether Selig can convert speeches into durable rulemaking before more commissioners are confirmed and the balance of power shifts. Rules written by a lone chair can be revisited once the commission is rebuilt, and Warren’s camp is likely to challenge any framework seen as too permissive.