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Regulation, derivatives helping drive TradFi institutions into crypto, panellists say

Non-participation in decentralized finance is becoming a career risk for traditional finance professionals, panellists said.

Feb 11, 2026, 10:59 a.m.
Two members of The Ultimate Deriving Machine panel at Consensus Hong Kong 2026
Panelists discuss regulation and the role of derivatives in bringing TradFi to DeFi (Daniel Murray/Consensus modified by CoinDesk)

What to know:

  • Major financial institutions are expanding into crypto derivatives as clearer U.S. regulation helps make digital assets a mainstream portfolio allocation.
  • New products such as overnight rate futures, multitoken indexes and access to DeFi liquidity are enabling institutional investors to move beyond bitcoin into broader crypto exposure and arbitrage strategies.
  • Futures and other derivatives, underpinned by a robust industrywide beta benchmark, will channel trillions of dollars of institutional capital into crypto, making non-participation a growing career risk for traditional finance professionals, panellists said.

Clearer rules and improved technology are accelerating the convergence of traditional finance (TradFi) and decentralized markets, driving established institutions into areas such as crypto derivatives, according to panelists at Consensus Hong Kong.

"Regulation is really important. It gives you the rails that you need to operate in," said Jason Urban, global co-head of digital assets at Galaxy Digital (GLXY), who took part in the "Ultimate Deriving Machine" panel.

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Other speakers, including executives from exchange operator ICE Futures U.S., crypto prime brokerage FalconX and investment company ARK Invest highlighted how developments in the U.S., such as the 2024 approval of spot crypto exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and harmonization between the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) have flipped crypto from a speculative sideline to a portfolio staple.

The key takeaway is that derivatives are set to grease the path for trillions of dollars in institutional inflows to the market. The momentum goes well beyond bitcoin , the largest cryptocurrency by market value.

ICE Futures U.S. President Jennifer Ilkiw highlighted forthcoming overnight rate futures tied to Circle Internet's (CRCL) USDC stablecoin, launching in April, and multitoken indexes as evidence of institutions looking beyond bitcoin for exposure to a range of tokens.

"It makes it very easy. It's like, if you're taking our MSCI Emerging Markets, there's hundreds of equities in there. You don't need to know every single one," she said, citing demand from former crypto skeptics.

Josh Lim, the global co-head of markets at FalconX, stressed bridging traditional financial exchanges like the CME with liquidity pools in decentralized finance (DeFi) using prime brokerages for hedge-fund arbitrage and leverage.

"Hyperliquid, obviously has been a big theme for this year, and last year, we've enabled a lot of our hedge fund clients to access that marketplace through our prime brokerage offering," Lim said, referring to the largest decentralized exchange (DEX) for derivatives.

"It's actually essential for firms like us … to bridge this liquidity gap between TradFi and DeFi … That's a big edge," Lim said. Crypto innovations like 24/7 trading and perpetuals are influencing Wall Street.

ARK Invest President Tom Staudt called the debut of spot bitcoin ETFs in the U.S. a milestone that slotted crypto into mainstream wealth managers' portfolios and systems.

But he urged adoption of a true industry-wide beta benchmark — a broader market standard for measuring an asset's risk and performance relative to the overall crypto market. There's a need for a diversified index, rather than relying solely on a single reference point like bitcoin, he said.

"Bitcoin is a specific asset, but it's not an asset class ... You can't have alpha without beta," he said, pointing to futures as the gateway for structured products and active strategies.

inaction now is akin to "career suicide," as real-world assets come onchain and demand participation, Urban said.

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Senator Mark Warner, a leading Democratic negotiator on the market structure bill, said he wants it to pass, and SEC chief Paul Atkins said durable policy actually requires it.

What to know:

  • In a U.S. Senate Banking Committee hearing today, Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Paul Atkins said that making crypto policies permanent really demands legislation, despite the authorities he said his agency has to write rules that will work in the interim.
  • Though progress has moved in fits and starts on the U.S. Senate bill to govern crypto market structure, one of the top negotiators on the Democrats' side, Senator Mark Warner, said during the hearing that he still wants the effort to advance.