Who's at the CFTC Table? A Rebalancing of American Fintech Discourse
Original Title: "Who's at the CFTC Table? A Reimagination of US Innovation Finance Discourse"
On February 12, 2026, the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) officially released Announcement No. 9182-26, announcing the members of the Innovation Advisory Committee (IAC).
If you thought this was just a routine regulatory agency "think tank" list, you couldn't be more wrong.
This list, which brings together traditional financial titans, top crypto industry platforms, DeFi infrastructure players, top-tier venture capital firms, and academic representatives, is not a simple industry advisory group formation. Instead, it is a key step in the implementation of CFTC's innovative financial market regulatory coordination framework based on the Federal Advisory Committee Act.
The Innovation Advisory Committee (IAC), led by CFTC Chairman Michael S. Selig, which was formerly the Technology Advisory Committee (TAC), clearly conveys a signal from its inception to its final lineup: U.S. regulators are actively embracing crypto and fintech innovation, shifting from "passive regulation" to "cooperative governance."
Full House Lineup: From Exchanges, DeFi to Traditional Finance Grand Slam
Unlike past instances where regulatory agencies would invite one or two crypto representatives to "decorate the facade," this time CFTC's IAC committee list can be described as a "all-star lineup," encompassing 35 members from traditional financial giants, crypto exchanges, DeFi protocols, blockchain infrastructure, investment firms, academic representatives, and more.
1. CEX
· Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong
· Kraken Co-CEO Arjun Sethi
· Gemini CEO Tyler Winklevoss
· Crypto.com CEO Kris Marszalek
· Robinhood CEO Vlad Tenev
· Blockchain.com CEO Peter Smith
· Bullish CEO Tom Farley
· Bitnomial CEO Luke Hoersten
2. Prediction Markets
· Polymarket CEO Shayne Coplan
· Kalshi CEO Tarek Mansour
· FanDuel President Christian Genetski
· DraftKings CEO Jason Robins
3. DeFi and Layer 1 Blockchains
· Uniswap Labs CEO Hayden Adams
· Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse
· Solana Labs CEO Anatoly Yakovenko
· Chainlink Labs CEO Sergey Nazarov
· Ethereum Promotion and Productization Entrepreneur Etherealize CEO Vivek Raman
4. Top Crypto Venture Capital
· a16z crypto General Partner Chris Dixon
· Paradigm Partner Alana Palmedo
· Framework Ventures Co-Founder Vance Spencer
5. Digital Asset Custody and Asset Management
· Anchorage Digital CEO Nathan McCauley
· Grayscale CEO Peter Mintzberg
6. Traditional Finance and Clearing, Trading Institutions
· Options Clearing Corporation CEO Andrej Bolkovic
· Derivatives Trading and Clearing Platform Rothera Markets CEO Thomas Chippas
· Cboe Global Markets CEO Craig Donohue
· CME Group CEO Terry Duffy
· Nasdaq CEO Adena Friedman
· Custody, Trust, and Settlement Company President and CEO Frank LaSalla
· International Swaps and Derivatives Association (ISDA) CEO Scott D. O.
· London Stock Exchange Group (LSEG) CEO David Schwimmer
· Intercontinental Exchange (ICE) CEO Jeff Sprecher
· Trading Firm DRW CEO Don Wilson
7. Academic and Regulatory Representatives
Professor Harry Crane, Professor Carla Reyes
8. Others
· Futures Industry Association (FIA) CEO Walt Lukken
The CFTC has made it clear that the IAC's core responsibility is to provide expert advice on cutting-edge innovation in the derivatives and commodities markets, with a focus on the market's restructuring by technologies such as AI and blockchain, assisting in forming "adaptive rules" for regulators to maintain the effectiveness of financial regulation.
Regulatory Logic: Top-level Coordination
The IAC is not a temporary organization but a long-term design by the CFTC for the golden age of the U.S. financial markets to provide expert advice on the technical innovation of the financial markets.
According to Announcement 9167-26 issued by the CFTC on January 12 this year, Michael S. Selig had already clearly defined the positioning of the IAC a month earlier:
· Establishment Background: To replace the original Technology Advisory Committee: This renaming is not a play on words. Under Michael S. Selig's leadership, the CFTC has clearly realized that discussing blockchain technology and AI technology alone is outdated, and what needs to be discussed now is entirely new financial business models driven by technology.
· Core Work: The IAC focuses on the intersection of finance and technology (such as blockchain, digital assets, AI, etc.), balancing perspectives from various parties such as the financial industry, regulatory bodies, fintech providers, academic institutions, etc., to help the CFTC understand the impact of technological innovation and guide the application of new technologies in the financial market. It only provides consultation and recommendations without actual decision-making authority.
· Operational Details: The CFTC provides support, with annual operating costs of approximately $170,000, and members work without compensation. Additionally, the CFTC will have a dedicated Senior Designated Federal Officer overseeing all affairs such as meetings, compliance, training, etc. The committee will meet at least once a year, with subcommittees meeting on an as-needed basis.
This means that the previous situation where the industry and regulation engaged in "dialogue from a distance" has been broken. DeFi representatives, CEXs, traditional exchanges, clearinghouses, and venture capital are all "sitting at the same table," allowing the CFTC to directly access frontline market insights and advice, avoiding rule-making detached from reality.
What Does This Mean for Web3?
The IAC List Landing has at least the following clear impacts on the crypto industry:
1. The "Legalization" Coronation of Prediction Markets
Within the IAC list, the most eye-catching entries are Polymarket CEO Shayne Coplan and Kalshi CEO Tarek Mansour.
After a long tug-of-war between regulators on whether "election prediction" constitutes gambling, the CFTC's move is equivalent to recognizing prediction markets' financial status as "event contracts." More interestingly, the list also includes the presidents of DraftKings and FanDuel—meaning the boundaries between sports betting, financial derivatives, and on-chain prediction markets are becoming blurred.
This shift is particularly evident in prediction market regulation. In February 2026, the CFTC announced the withdrawal of the 2024 proposed rule on "event contracts." At that time, CFTC Chairman Michael S. Selig stated, "The 2024 event contract-related proposal reflects the reckless regulation of the previous administration's complete ban on political contracts before the 2024 presidential election." The CFTC will promote new rule-making based on a rational interpretation of the Commodity Exchange Act to advance rules that align with congressional intent and promote responsible innovation in the derivatives market.
2. DeFi and Public Blockchains Obtain Official "Seats"
DeFi and public blockchain projects or related ventures such as Uniswap, Solana, Chainlink, and Etherealize CEO Vivek Raman, who promotes Ethereum adoption and product creation, have been selected. This not only acknowledges the status of DeFi infrastructure but also signifies that the CFTC is recognizing code as market structure from the underlying technology. The debate over "whether DeFi frontends need licensing" may shift toward a more practical "how protocols can comply."
3. Further Consolidation of Compliance Benefits for Major Platforms
Institutions with a long-standing commitment to U.S. compliance, such as Coinbase, Kraken, Gemini, have entered the core advisory layer, indicating that in the future, the CFTC's rule-making will be more closely aligned with the actual operating logic of these platforms, and the compliance advantage of key players will continue to grow.
Platforms of this kind, with deep integration with regulation, will gain significant advantages in licensing acquisition, business innovation, and other areas. The industry's Matthew effect will be further intensified, which will also pressure small and medium-sized platforms to accelerate their compliance layout, driving the overall compliance upgrade of the entire crypto industry.
Summary
The core regulatory areas of the CFTC are derivatives and the commodity market. Innovations such as crypto derivatives, digital asset futures, blockchain clearing and settlement, prediction markets, etc., are becoming the core development directions in this field.
The establishment of the IAC is a regulatory paradigm upgrade promoted by the CFTC, shifting towards "innovative early-stage forward-looking rule design" and "market-driven adaptive regulation."
The essence of this upgrade is fundamentally a rethinking of the symbiotic relationship between regulation and innovation: financial technology innovation is not the opposite of regulation but rather the core driving force of the modernization of the financial market. The core role of regulation is not to hinder innovation but to define boundaries for innovation, mitigate risks, and enable innovation to realize value within a compliant framework.
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