REGULATION

CFTC names innovation team for crypto rules

The US Commodity Futures Trading Commission has named the first staff members of its Innovation Task Force, a new group the agency says will help shape a clearer regulatory framework for crypto assets and blockchain technology. In its April 10 announcement, the CFTC also tied the task force to work on artificial intelligence, autonomous systems, and prediction markets.

The move adds staff to an initiative Chairman Michael S. Selig launched on March 24 as part of a push to replace patchy crypto oversight with formal guidance, interpretations, and rulemaking. For the digital asset industry, the key point is simple. The CFTC is now putting named people behind that effort.

The team blends agency veterans and outside hires

The task force is led by Michael J. Passalacqua, a senior advisor to Selig. The first group includes Hank Balaban, Sam Canavos, Mark Fajfar, Eugene Gonzalez IV, and Dina Moussa, all serving as senior advisors. The CFTC said the team draws from agency divisions and offices as well as people with private sector backgrounds in crypto, fintech, and market regulation.

That mix appears intentional. Balaban previously worked at Latham and Watkins on digital assets and emerging companies. Canavos came from Patomak Global Partners, where he advised on crypto and prediction markets. Gonzalez practiced in Sidley Austin’s blockchain and fintech group, while Fajfar and Moussa came from inside the CFTC.

The task force is part of a wider policy reset

The staff announcement did not come on its own. Since mid-March, the CFTC has joined the SEC in publishing a joint interpretation on how federal securities laws apply to certain crypto assets, issued a no-action position tied to Phantom’s self-custodial wallet software, and released crypto-related FAQs for registrants and clearing market participants.

The agency has also built an “Innovation at the CFTC” hub and tracker that groups those steps under one policy banner. The site says the goal is to keep innovation in the United States and under US law while preserving protections against fraud, manipulation, and systemic risk.

The next test is whether clarity turns into rules

For crypto firms, the staff list matters less as a personnel update than as a sign of pace. A staffed task force gives the CFTC a dedicated channel for meetings, written input, and coordination with the SEC, which the March launch notice said would be part of the job.

The harder part comes next. Builders and exchanges have heard promises of clearer rules before. What they need now is follow-through on token status, market structure, and how blockchain-based products fit within US derivatives law. The new task force gives the CFTC a team to start answering those questions in public.

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