The contracts settle in INJ with monthly expiries, allowing traders to take price exposure without holding the underlying asset.
Crypto News
Chicago-based derivatives exchange Bitnomial has listed monthly futures contracts tied to Injective's native token, INJ, making it the first U.S.-regulated derivatives product for the Injective protocol. The contracts were announced Wednesday and are available immediately to institutional clients, with retail access expected through Bitnomial's Botanical platform in the coming weeks.
The contracts settle in INJ with monthly expiries, allowing traders to take price exposure without holding the underlying asset. Margin can be posted in crypto or U.S. dollars through Bitnomial's clearinghouse. The exchange also said it plans to add perpetual futures and options tied to INJ.
Bitnomial is regulated by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and operates a trading venue, clearinghouse, and brokerage for crypto derivatives. In January, it listed the first U.S.-regulated futures tied to Aptos’ APT, following a similar launch model to the INJ product. The exchange later launched regulated XRP futures for U.S. users in March, citing evolving SEC policy toward crypto derivatives.
U.S.-regulated crypto futures have historically been concentrated in BTC and ETH, with few venues offering derivatives on altcoins. Other exchanges have expanded cautiously: Coinbase launched CFTC-regulated futures for institutional clients in June 2023 and later added retail-sized contracts and 24/7 trading in May 2025. Kraken acquired futures platform NinjaTrader for approximately $1.5 billion in May 2025, gaining a CFTC-registered Futures Commission Merchant in the process.
The INJ contracts represent Bitnomial's continued push to bring altcoin derivatives under U.S. regulatory oversight, at a time when the SEC's posture toward crypto futures products is still taking shape. Whether the six-month futures track record translates into ETF eligibility will depend on the SEC's review of the Canary Capital filing and the corresponding Cboe rule change.
