After Perps Approval, Stablecoins Still Anchor Risk
The post After Perps Approval, Stablecoins Still Anchor Risk appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Picture a trader rotating out of altcoins after a volatile week. They don’t retreat to fiat; they sit in USDC, waiting for the next perp entry. This is how risk is actually warehoused in crypto: in dollars that live on-chain. That habit just met a new regulatory inflection. The CFTC approved a bitcoin-referenced perpetual futures contract, and separately offered staff-level relief around posting customer-owned digital commodities and payment stablecoins as margin in certain foreign-futures setups. The headlines may look technical, but they touch the very pipes of crypto risk. So the question isn’t whether stablecoins matter after “perps approval.” It’s why they are still the instrument most desks trust to meter, move, and measure risk. The Big Picture: Why This Moment Matters Regulatory clarity in derivatives tends to ripple out into collateral, settlement, and market structure. On May 29,