Fragmented oversight enables risky products to migrate to lax jurisdictions, undermining market stability and exposing retail investors to unchecked leverage.
The study underscores a paradox: crypto‑derivatives replicate the economic functions of classic futures and swaps, yet regulators treat them as novel assets. By shoehorning these contracts into legacy frameworks, policymakers have introduced classification criteria—such as cash versus crypto settlement—that bear little relation to the underlying risk profile. This misalignment fuels a compliance maze for firms operating across borders, forcing them to redesign products merely to satisfy divergent legal definitions rather than to manage systemic exposure.
Three structural fault lines drive the regulatory split. First, cash‑settled contracts are more likely to fall under supervision, while crypto‑settled equivalents often slip through exemptions, despite delivering identical payoff structures. Second, jurisdictions differ on whether the underlying token is a commodity, security, or a new asset class, prompting firms to re‑engineer contracts for tax or licensing advantages. Third, marketability rules exclude many over‑the‑counter or unlisted offerings, echoing pre‑2008 gaps that allowed opacity and concentration of risk. The result is a thriving arbitrage ecosystem where liquidity gravitates toward offshore hubs with permissive regimes, while retail participants face high‑leverage products with minimal safeguards.
Policymakers are urged to adopt a functional, technology‑neutral definition of crypto‑derivatives, anchored in economic risk rather than form. Harmonized reporting standards and prudential caps—coordinated by supranational bodies such as the IOSCO or the Basel Committee—could close loopholes, enhance market transparency, and protect investors. Without such convergence, the sector risks repeating the systemic failures of earlier derivatives cycles, amplified by the speed and global reach of digital trading platforms.
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