Commodity Exchange Act Digital Commodity Regime is a proposed U.S. federal framework for CFTC oversight of spot-market digital commodity intermediaries. The main legislative vehicle is S. 3755, the Digital Commodity Intermediaries Act, reported in the Senate on Feb. 2, 2026. The regime is not enacted as of June 4, 2026; it remains pending alongside the broader Digital Asset Market Clarity Act, H.R. 3633.
Proposed Digital Commodity Framework
S. 3755 would amend the Commodity Exchange Act to add digital-asset definitions and a registration structure for digital commodity markets. The bill defines a digital commodity as a fungible digital asset that can be exclusively possessed and transferred person-to-person without necessary reliance on an intermediary and is recorded on a blockchain. The definition would include some network tokens and meme coins, while excluding securities, permitted payment stablecoins, banking deposits, commodity derivatives, pooled investment vehicle interests, and certain goods, collectibles, loyalty points, tickets, and nonfungible-token-style assets.
The proposal would create a CFTC spot-market regime without turning every blockchain-recorded agreement into a digital commodity transaction. Savings provisions preserve existing Commodity Exchange Act treatment for futures, swaps, options, leverage transactions, and related activities. The bill also states that it should not be read to authorize spot-market regulation for commodities other than digital commodities.
Registration of Digital Commodity Intermediaries
The central operational change would be registration for digital commodity exchanges, brokers, and dealers. A trading facility offering or seeking to offer a cash or spot market in at least one digital commodity would register with the CFTC as a digital commodity exchange. The exchange application framework would require CFTC rules addressing governance, resources, system safeguards, surveillance, and conflict management, with exemptions for certain single-state, de minimis, or already CFTC-registered trading facilities.
Digital commodity brokers and dealers would be subject to new Commodity Exchange Act section 4u. The bill would make it unlawful to act as a digital commodity broker or dealer unless registered, subject to specified exemptions such as de minimis activity, single-state service, or futures commission merchant status with notice and compliance conditions. Registered brokers and dealers would need to join a registered futures association and comply with rules for conflicts, capital, execution, records, business conduct, disclosures, fair pricing, and fraud prevention.
Customer Protection, Custody, and Market Integrity
The exchange regime would impose core principles for trading rules, fair access, abuse detection, listing standards, trade-data publication, recordkeeping, conflicts of interest, financial resources, governance fitness, system safeguards, and risk management. Exchanges could list only digital commodities that are not readily susceptible to manipulation and would need policies tied to public information and disclosures about the relevant blockchain system.
Customer-asset provisions are a major part of the proposal. Digital commodity exchanges would need to hold customer money, assets, and property in a manner designed to minimize loss or delay in customer access. Digital assets held for customers would generally need to be held with a qualified digital asset custodian. Customer property would need to be segregated, subject to permitted exceptions, and certain assets held for customers by a digital commodity exchange would be treated as customer property for bankruptcy purposes.
Status and Timeline
The Senate Agriculture Committee announced on Jan. 29, 2026, that it had advanced the Digital Commodity Intermediaries Act. GovInfo records show S. 3755 was then reported in the Senate, read twice, and placed on the calendar on Feb. 2, 2026. The broader H.R. 3633 market-structure vehicle was advanced by the Senate Banking Committee on May 14, 2026, and reported in the Senate with an amendment on June 1, 2026.
If enacted in the form of S. 3755, the general effective date would be 18 months after enactment. For provisions requiring rulemaking, the effective date would be the later of 18 months after enactment or 120 days after publication of the implementing final rule. Because no enactment has occurred, those phase-in periods have not started.
Jurisdictional Impact
This is a U.S. federal profile. It does not describe an operative CFTC spot-market registration regime, state money-transmitter law, securities law, or stablecoin issuer framework. Its relevance is to federal market-structure tracking, CFTC/SEC jurisdictional boundaries, exchange and intermediary registration policy, customer asset protection, and the treatment of digital commodities under the Commodity Exchange Act.