Michael Selig, President Donald Trump’s nominee to lead the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, is set to face a full Senate confirmation vote as early as “this afternoon” following a 12-11 party-line committee approval last month.
The vote comes at a pivotal moment for U.S. crypto regulation, with the CFTC poised to assume sweeping new authority over digital asset markets while operating under severe leadership constraints that have left only one commissioner seated since September.
Selig’s confirmation hearing in November drew sharp scrutiny over staffing levels, with senators questioning whether the agency’s 543 employees can handle expanded crypto oversight responsibilities that Congress is preparing to assign through pending legislation, including the CLARITY Act.
The nominee, currently chief counsel for the SEC’s Crypto Task Force, has pledged to help make America “the Crypto Capital of the World” while building regulatory structures that support developer innovation and enforce traditional market safeguards on new exchanges.
Michael Selig. | Source: The Intercept
Acting Chair Caroline Pham announced yesterday that the agency is withdrawing its 2020 “actual delivery” guidance for virtual currencies, eliminating compliance barriers that penalized crypto firms with overly complex rules built around a 28-day asset possession standard.
The outdated framework, designed when regulators were still uncertain about the crypto market’s development, classified digital assets as a separate regulatory category from traditional commodities, despite years of market maturation and improved custody practices.
“Eliminating outdated and overly complex guidance that penalizes the crypto industry and stifles innovation is exactly what the Administration has set out to do this year,” Pham said in a statement.
The withdrawal allows Bitcoin, Ethereum, and other digital assets to fall under the CFTC’s general technology-neutral framework, reducing compliance burdens for exchanges seeking to list new products while normalizing crypto alongside traditional commodities.
The change arrives days after the agency authorized spot crypto trading on federally regulated futures exchanges for the first time, bringing direct buying and selling of digital assets onto platforms that have operated under federal standards for nearly a century.
Beyond spot trading approval, the CFTC is pressing forward with its Crypto Sprint initiative through a December 8 pilot program authorizing Bitcoin, Ether, and USDC as collateral in derivatives markets.
The three-month program requires futures commission merchants to submit weekly reports on holdings, giving regulators real-time visibility into the performance of tokenized assets under supervised conditions while establishing guardrails to protect customers.
The agency simultaneously issued guidance confirming that tokenized real-world assets, such as U.S. Treasuries and money market funds, can be evaluated within existing regulatory frameworks.
It also granted no-action relief for firms seeking to accept certain non-securities digital assets as customer margin, addressing custody, segregation, valuation haircuts, and operational risks that have kept institutions on the sidelines.
Selig’s nomination follows months of uncertainty after Trump withdrew his initial pick, former CFTC Commissioner Brian Quintenz, whose candidacy collapsed in September amid opposition from Gemini co-founders Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss.
The White House had reportedly vetted several alternatives, including former CFTC official Josh Sterling and Treasury counselor Tyler Williams, before settling on Selig, who previously advised blockchain clients in private practice and worked on digital asset policy under former CFTC Chair J. Christopher Giancarlo.
The agency has operated in crisis mode since January, when Chair Rostin Behnam resigned after overseeing major enforcement actions, including the $4.3 billion Binance settlement.
Commissioner Kristin Johnson departed in September, while Caroline Pham announced plans to join MoonPay once a successor is confirmed, leaving the five-seat commission barely functional and slowing policy coordination with Congress on legislation that would grant the CFTC primary oversight of spot crypto markets under frameworks outlined in the President’s Working Group on Digital Asset Markets report.
Notably, House Agriculture Committee Chairman Glenn Thompson told lawmakers he looks forward to the Senate’s confirmation vote and plans to invite Selig early next year to discuss his agenda for the agency’s first reauthorization in over a decade.


