The reshuffling of the US innovative financial discourse: Who has secured a seat at the CFTC's table?

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Title: Who’s at the CFTC Table? A Reallocation of America’s Innovation Financial Discourse

Byline: KarenZ, Foresight News

On February 12, 2026, the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) officially issued Notice No. 9182-26, announcing the members of the Innovation Advisory Committee (IAC).

If you thought this was just a routine list of external advisors for a regulatory agency, you’re mistaken.

This list, which includes traditional financial giants, leading crypto platforms, DeFi infrastructure providers, top venture capital firms, and academic representatives, is not merely a standard industry advisory group. It marks a key step in implementing the CFTC’s innovative financial market regulatory framework under the Federal Advisory Committee Act.

Led by CFTC Chair Michael S. Selig, the Innovation Advisory Committee (IAC), formerly known as the Technology Advisory Committee (TAC), signals a clear message: U.S. regulators are actively embracing crypto and fintech innovation, shifting from “passive regulation” to “collaborative governance.”

Star-Studded Lineup: From Exchanges and DeFi to Traditional Finance

Unlike previous instances where regulators invited one or two crypto representatives for show, this time the CFTC’s IAC roster is an “all-star lineup,” comprising 35 members from traditional finance, crypto exchanges, DeFi protocols, blockchain infrastructure, investment firms, and academia.

1. Centralized Exchanges (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 Blockchain Infrastructure

  • Uniswap Labs CEO Hayden Adams
  • Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse
  • Solana Labs CEO Anatoly Yakovenko
  • Chainlink Labs CEO Sergey Nazarov
  • Etherealize CEO Vivek Raman (Ethereum promotion and product startup)

4. Top Crypto Venture Capital Firms

  • a16z Crypto Managing Partner Chris Dixon
  • Paradigm Managing 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, Clearing, and Trading Institutions

  • Option Clearing Corporation CEO Andrej Bolkovic
  • Rothera Markets CEO Thomas Chippas
  • Cboe Global Markets CEO Craig Donohue
  • CME Group CEO Terry Duffy
  • Nasdaq CEO Adena Friedman
  • Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation President & CEO Frank LaSalla
  • International Swaps and Derivatives Association (ISDA) CEO Scott D. O’Malia
  • London Stock Exchange Group CEO David Schwimmer
  • Intercontinental Exchange (ICE) CEO Jeff Sprecher
  • Trading firm DRW CEO Don Wilson

7. Academic and Compliance Representatives

Professors Harry Crane and Carla Reyes

8. Others

FIA CEO Walt Lukken

The CFTC explicitly states that the core responsibility of the IAC is to provide expert advice on cutting-edge innovations in derivatives and commodities markets, focusing on how AI, blockchain, and other technologies are reshaping markets, helping regulators craft “adaptive rules” to maintain effective oversight.

Regulatory Logic: Top-Down Collaboration

The IAC is not a temporary body but a long-term strategic initiative by the CFTC to support the golden era of U.S. financial markets, offering professional guidance on technological innovation.

According to Notice No. 9167-26 issued on January 12, 2026, Michael S. Selig clarified the IAC’s positioning a month earlier:

  • Background: Replacing the former Technology Advisory Committee. This renaming is not just a name change. Under Selig’s leadership, the CFTC recognizes that merely discussing blockchain and AI technologies is outdated. The focus now is on entirely new financial business models driven by technology.
  • Core Focus: The IAC concentrates on the intersection of finance and technology (such as blockchain, digital assets, AI), balancing perspectives from financial industry players, regulators, fintech providers, and academia. Its role is to help the CFTC understand technological impacts and guide the responsible application of new tech in markets. It only provides advice and recommendations, without decision-making authority.
  • Operations: The CFTC provides support, with annual operating costs around $170,000, and members work pro bono. Additionally, a dedicated federal officer will oversee meetings, compliance, and training. The committee will meet at least once a year, with subcommittees convening as needed.

This signifies a break from the past “distant dialogue” between industry and regulators. DeFi representatives, CEXs, traditional exchanges, clearinghouses, and venture capitalists are now “at the same table,” enabling the CFTC to directly access frontline market insights and advice, avoiding rules that are disconnected from reality.

What Does This Mean for Web3?

The implementation of the IAC list has at least the following clear implications for the crypto industry:

1. Legitimization of Prediction Markets

The most notable inclusion is Polymarket CEO Shayne Coplan and Kalshi CEO Tarek Mansour.

After a prolonged regulatory tug-of-war over whether “election prediction” markets constitute gambling, the CFTC’s move effectively recognizes prediction markets as a legitimate financial instrument under the category of “event contracts.” Interestingly, the list also includes the presidents of DraftKings and FanDuel—blurring the lines between sports betting, financial derivatives, and on-chain prediction markets.

This shift is especially evident in the regulation of prediction markets. In February 2026, the CFTC announced it would withdraw its proposed rules for “event contracts” issued in 2024. At the time, Chair Selig stated: “The 2024 proposal on event contracts reflected the reckless regulation of political contracts by the previous administration ahead of the 2024 presidential election.” The CFTC will now pursue new rules aligned with the Commodity Exchange Act, consistent with Congress’s intent, to promote responsible innovation in derivatives markets.

2. DeFi and Public Blockchains Gaining Official “Seats”

The inclusion of DeFi and blockchain infrastructure projects like Uniswap, Solana, Chainlink, and Etherealize (a startup promoting Ethereum) signifies recognition of DeFi’s foundational role. It also indicates that the CFTC is beginning to acknowledge that code itself constitutes market structure—shifting the debate from “do DeFi protocols need licenses?” to “how can protocols comply?”

3. The “Compliance Dividend” for Leading Platforms

The participation of Coinbase, Kraken, Gemini, and other established compliant platforms in the core advisory group suggests that future rulemaking will be more aligned with their operational realities. This will further strengthen the regulatory advantage of compliant players, intensify the industry’s “Matthew Effect,” and push smaller platforms to accelerate compliance efforts, upgrading the entire industry’s regulatory standards.

Summary

The CFTC’s core regulatory focus remains on derivatives and commodities markets, with crypto derivatives, digital asset futures, blockchain clearing, and prediction markets becoming central areas of development.

The establishment of the IAC marks an upgrade in the CFTC’s regulatory paradigm—shifting toward “forward-looking, early-stage rule design” and “market-based adaptive regulation.”

At its core, this evolution reflects a rethinking of the relationship between regulation and innovation: fintech innovation is not opposed to regulation but is a key driver of market modernization. The regulator’s role is not to hinder innovation but to define boundaries and manage risks, enabling innovation to flourish within a compliant framework.

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