The cryptocurrency exchange rolled out regulated futures products to European markets on Monday, providing Coinbase Advanced platform users across 26 nations — including France, Germany, and the Netherlands — with new trading opportunities.
Operating through its MiFID-registered entity, the exchange ensures full regulatory compliance with European financial legislation for these new offerings.
The product suite features cryptocurrency futures for Bitcoin and Solana, alongside an innovative Mag7 + Crypto Equity Index Futures contract. This hybrid instrument provides combined exposure to the tech giants known as the Magnificent Seven — including Apple, Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon, Nvidia, Meta, and Tesla — plus cryptocurrency-related equities and BlackRock iShares ETFs tracking BTC and ETH.
This comprehensive approach reflects the platform’s ambition to serve diverse trading preferences simultaneously.
Coinbase Global, Inc., COIN
Coinbase provides two distinct cash-settled futures categories. Perpetual-style contracts feature five-year expiration dates with hourly funding adjustments and daily settlement processes. Dated contracts offer predetermined monthly or quarterly expiration schedules, with daily mark-to-market calculations using official settlement benchmarks.
Leverage options reach 10x on certain cryptocurrency contracts and equity indices, while alternative products provide up to 5x leverage. The fee structure begins at 0.02% per contract.
This European expansion arrives approximately two weeks following a February 24 advisory from the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA), which indicated that numerous perpetual futures offerings may fall within existing regulatory frameworks governing contracts for difference (CFDs).
CFD regulations impose leverage restrictions, require mandatory risk disclosures, establish margin close-out protocols, provide negative balance safeguards, and prohibit certain monetary incentives.
ESMA’s guidance also emphasized the importance of managing conflicts of interest associated with such products. The regulatory body’s statement applies industry-wide, extending beyond any single platform.
Coinbase has yet to issue public commentary regarding how its offerings align with ESMA’s CFD classification guidance.
Competitors including One Trading, Kraken, Backpack, and Gemini have previously introduced regulated perpetual futures across European markets.
The crypto exchange characterized its European derivatives expansion as a “major step” toward realizing its vision of creating an “exchange for everything,” consolidating access to worldwide assets on a single platform.
Separately on Friday, the platform extended access to its decentralized exchange infrastructure across 84 nations, demonstrating the company’s simultaneous advancement across multiple strategic initiatives.
COIN stock experienced modest fluctuations during Monday morning sessions, trading up 0.84% at press time.
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