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Crypto-Derivatives Regulation(s)

Marco Dell’Erba† & Andrea Vianelli

23 Apr 2026

Crypto-derivatives dominate the crypto-economy, accounting for over70% of trading activity, yet remain largely unexamined by regulators. This Article presents the first comparative analysis of crypto-derivatives regulation across eleven key jurisdictions, exposing regulatory fragmentation, its risks, and the urgent need for harmonized measures to address systemic vulnerabilities and investor protection gaps.
This Article first examines the core mechanics of both traditional and crypto-derivatives, demonstrating how crypto-derivatives largely mirror established financial structures while introducing new underlying assets, primarily cryptocurrencies. It then conducts a comparative analysis across eleven major jurisdictions, highlighting emerging regulatory trends, alongside enforcement actions. While the fundamental classifications of derivatives—options, swaps, futures, and forwards—remain consistent, regulatory disparities arise due to four key factors: settlement methods, definitions of eligible underlying assets, marketability considerations, and broader policy approaches.
This Article further explores the implications of these divergences, with particular focus on the risks of regulatory arbitrage, unregulated retail investor access to high-risk products, and the systemic vulnerabilities posed by interconnection, inadequate collateral management, and market concentration. Unlike traditional derivatives markets, where post-2008 financial crisis regulations imposed stricter oversight, crypto-derivatives regulation remains largely fragmented across jurisdictions, creating potential for systemic instability and harming investors.
In response, this Article presents concrete policy recommendations aimed at fostering a harmonized regulatory framework. These include the adoption of a functional, technology-neutral definition of crypto-derivatives, enhanced reporting and prudential standards to mitigate systemic risks, and restrictions on retail investor access to speculative instruments. The Article argues that, given the inherently cross-border nature of crypto-derivatives trading, international regulatory coordination—potentially modeled on post-crisis financial reforms—is essential to ensure market stability and investor protection while enabling innovation in the evolving crypto-financial ecosystem

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Professor of Law, Chair for Corporate & Financial Law, University of Zurich, Research
Fellow, Institute for Corporate Governance & Finance – NYU Law. Global Fellow, Woodrow
Wilson Center, Program on Science, Technology Innovation.
†† PPhD Candidate, University of Zurich, Faculty of Law.
We are grateful to Dan Awrey, Yesha Yadav, and Giovanni Patti for helpful com-ments
and discussion.