Cryptocurrency exchange Kraken has deepened its foothold in the U.S. derivatives sector through a $100 million acquisition of Small Exchange, a designated contract market (DCM) regulated by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC). The move marks a significant step toward building a fully U.S.-based derivatives ecosystem that aligns with the exchange’s global ambitions.

The purchase from IG Group gives Kraken the necessary regulatory foundation to design and operate markets for exchange-listed derivatives in the U.S.—a privilege reserved for a select group of crypto firms. The Wyoming-headquartered company described the transaction as a major milestone in its mission to expand a “unified, high-performance trading environment.”

Strengthening a Regulated Derivatives Framework

In its announcement, Kraken emphasized that acquiring Small Exchange represents a pivotal part of its multi-year strategy to grow its presence across the world’s largest capital markets. The exchange now operates regulated derivatives venues in the United States, the United Kingdom, and the European Union, enabling trading across six fiat currencies and over 450 digital and traditional assets.

Kraken co-CEO Arjun Sethi described the move as transformative for U.S. crypto derivatives: “Kraken’s acquisition of a CFTC regulated Designated Contract Market creates the foundation for a new generation of United States derivatives markets. It is designed for scale, transparency and efficiency.”

Sethi explained that the integration will connect spot, futures, and margin products within a single regulated liquidity system, effectively minimizing market fragmentation and improving execution speed.

“This step connects spot, futures and margin products inside a single regulated liquidity system, reducing fragmentation, lowering funding latency and bringing onshore the kind of access and performance that has mostly existed offshore,” he said. “Under CFTC oversight, Kraken can now integrate clearing, risk and matching into one environment that meets the same standards as the largest exchanges in the world.”

Expanding Through Strategic Acquisitions

The Small Exchange deal continues a pattern of strategic acquisitions that have extended Kraken’s influence across global derivatives markets. Earlier this year, Kraken completed a $1.5 billion acquisition of NinjaTrader, a U.S. futures trading platform that gave its clients access to Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME)-listed cryptocurrency futures. This integration allowed users to trade crypto futures and spot assets within one seamless interface.

In October, Kraken broadened its offering to include contracts tied to equities, foreign exchange (FX) indices, and commodities such as oil and gold. The company’s growing derivatives network builds upon earlier moves, including its 2019 purchase of Crypto Facilities, a U.K.-based Multilateral Trading Facility (MTF) regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA). That acquisition helped establish what is now Europe’s largest regulated crypto futures market under the MiFID II framework.

Kraken has framed these deals as part of a deliberate strategy to create institutional-grade infrastructure for crypto derivatives. “By securing the necessary licensing and infrastructure today, Kraken is laying the groundwork for institutional-grade markets as crypto matures,” the company said in a press release.

A Broader Industry Shift Toward Derivatives

Kraken’s latest expansion arrives as the derivatives sector continues to outpace spot trading across centralized exchanges. Industry data shows that while spot volumes dropped roughly 22% in the second quarter of 2025, derivatives trading only declined by about 4%, reaching $20.2 trillion globally. Analysts project that total derivatives volume could surge to $23 trillion by the end of 2025.

The momentum reflects growing institutional adoption and evolving regulatory clarity in the United States. “Digital asset firms are no longer content being sideshow players. They aim to wrest seats in the core capital markets ecosystem,” said Michael Ashley Schulman, partner and CIO at Running Point Capital Advisors.

Sethi echoed this sentiment, saying the acquisition is part of “a larger build of global infrastructure.” He added that Kraken’s expanding network allows collateral to move in real time and nets exposure across jurisdictions, helping to eliminate capital inefficiencies that have historically constrained U.S. traders.

Amid a more crypto-friendly policy environment under President Donald Trump’s administration, Kraken’s regulatory expansion underscores a broader race among exchanges to secure compliant derivatives offerings. Competitors like Coinbase and CME Group have also announced plans to enhance or introduce 24/7 crypto derivatives trading in the coming year.

By merging Small Exchange into its ecosystem, Kraken is positioning itself to lead that evolution — uniting spot, futures, and margin trading under a single regulated umbrella aimed at delivering the efficiency and sophistication of the world’s largest financial exchanges.