The CFTC has announced three enforcement actions this month that further cement the CFTC’s jurisdiction over the decentralized finance space (“DeFi”). Back in 2022, the CFTC filed its first DeFi cases, including the Polymarket enforcement action and the Ooki DAO enforcement action where the CFTC alleged for the first time that DeFi platforms as well as decentralized autonomous organizations (“DAOs”) could be deemed a “person” under the Commodity Exchange Act of 1936 (“CEA”) and would therefore be subject to CFTC’s regulations.
This month’s three enforcement actions, involved operators of DeFi platforms, specifically Opyn, Inc., ZeroEx, Inc., and Deridex, Inc. each of which the CFTC has alleged to be engaged in offering illegal digital asset derivatives trading. With respect to these actions, Director of Enforcement, Ian McGinley remarked, “Somewhere along the way, DeFi operators got the idea that unlawful transactions become lawful when facilitated by smart contracts. They do not. The DeFi space may be novel, complex and evolving, but [we] will continue to evolve with it and aggressively pursue those who operate unregistered platforms that allow U.S. persons to trade digital asset derivatives.”
McGinley later provided comments at the Practicing Law Institute’s White Collar Crime conference on (September 11, 2023) summarizing the enforcement actions and explaining that “[e]ach of these three platforms was offering and confirming off-exchange leveraged or margined retail commodity transactions ... [and] we will do everything in our power to ensure that digital asset commodity transactions that should be conducted on regulated derivatives exchanges are in fact conducted on those exchanges.”
Digging into the three enforcement actions, each of the orders identifies the following activities as being violations of the CEA:
Director of Enforcement McGinley later provided comments at the Practicing Law Institute’s White Collar Crime conference on (September 11, 2023) summarizing the enforcement actions and explaining that “[e]ach of these three platforms was offering and confirming off-exchange leveraged or margined retail commodity transactions ... [and] we will do everything in our power to ensure that digital asset commodity transactions that should be conducted on regulated derivatives exchanges are in fact conducted on those exchanges.