CFTC Launches Innovation Task Force Focused on Crypto and Emerging Tech

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The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) has introduced a new Innovation Task Force, underlining a regulatory push into crypto and emerging tech. The task force, announced by Chairman Michael S. Selig on March 24 and staffed on April 10, is focused on digital assets, blockchain, artificial intelligence, and prediction markets. Michael J. Passalacqua leads the team, with support from Mark Fajfar and Taylor Foy. The CFTC has also issued FAQs and worked with the SEC to explain how federal laws apply to crypto assets, which could impact liquidity and crypto markets. The move signals a more hands-on approach to policy in risk-on assets, aiming to create clearer guidelines instead of relying on enforcement.

The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission has launched a new Innovation Task Force, putting crypto policy inside a broader push to set clearer rules for digital assets and other emerging technologies. Chairman Michael S. Selig announced the task force on March 24, and the agency named its staff on April 10.

The CFTC said the unit will help shape “clear rules of the road” for new products and technologies in U.S. derivatives markets. While some headlines described it as a crypto task force, the agency framed it more broadly. It will cover three main areas: crypto assets and blockchain, artificial intelligence and autonomous systems, and prediction markets and event contracts.

Michael J. Passalacqua will lead the group. The April 10 staff announcement also named Mark Fajfar as senior adviser and Taylor Foy as senior counsel, showing that the CFTC is building a dedicated internal team rather than treating crypto questions as a side issue.

Crypto policy moves faster at the CFTC

The task force arrives after several crypto related actions from the agency in March. On March 17, the CFTC said it joined the SEC in clarifying how federal securities laws apply to crypto assets. That statement also noted that some crypto assets that are not securities may still qualify as commodities under the Commodity Exchange Act.

Then, on March 20, CFTC staff issued FAQs for registrants and registered entities dealing with crypto assets and blockchain technology. Those FAQs addressed how regulated firms can handle digital asset activity inside the agency’s framework.

Taken together, those steps show a shift in tone. The CFTC is not only relying on enforcement actions. Instead, it is also building a formal policy channel for guidance, interpretation, and possible future rulemaking around crypto markets. That could matter for firms operating in derivatives, clearing, and other areas that touch digital assets.

What the new task force could change

The agency said the task force will work with the Commission and the Innovation Advisory Committee. It will also coordinate with other federal agencies, including the SEC and its own crypto task force. That suggests closer interagency work on where securities oversight ends and commodities oversight begins.

For crypto companies, the message is direct. Washington is still debating the boundaries of U.S. digital asset oversight, but the CFTC wants a larger role in shaping those rules where crypto products fall inside commodities and derivatives law.

So the main takeaway is not that the CFTC created a crypto only office. It created a wider innovation unit, with crypto placed at the center of its current regulatory agenda.

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