Floating Button
Home News US stocks

NYSE owner and OKX seek to launch perpetual futures tied to oil

Katherine Doherty / Bloomberg
Katherine Doherty / Bloomberg • 3 min read
NYSE owner and OKX seek to launch perpetual futures tied to oil
Crypto exchange operator OKX. New York Stock Exchange owner Intercontinental Exchange Inc and OKX are seeking to launch oil futures contracts for Brent crude and West Texas Intermediate that never expire. (Photo by Bloomberg)
Font Resizer
Share to Whatsapp
Share to Facebook
Share to LinkedIn
Scroll to top
Follow us on Facebook and join our Telegram channel for the latest updates.

May 22): Intercontinental Exchange Inc (ICE), owner of the New York Stock Exchange, is working with crypto exchange operator OKX to launch oil futures contracts that never expire.

ICE’s futures prices for Brent crude and West Texas Intermediate, known as WTI, will underpin the new perpetual contracts offered on OKX’s platform, the companies said in a statement on Friday. The new contracts will be available on OKX, in which ICE holds a stake, across territories where the crypto company is already licensed to offer perpetual futures.

“Oil markets are critical to the world economy,” Haider Rafique, global managing partner at OKX, said in the statement. Bringing ICE’s benchmarks “into regulated perpetual futures is exactly the kind of bridge between traditional and digital markets that market participants have been asking for.”

Perpetual futures, also known as “perps,” are a type of derivative contract that give traders the ability to bet on prices of assets such as oil or Bitcoin. But unlike traditional futures, perps never expire, so traders don’t have to take possession of physical barrels of oil or roll over those contracts.

While perps began on crypto-native exchanges as a way to speculate on digital token prices, the growth into other assets has taken off in recent months, especially as news breaks over the weekend, allowing investors to take action outside of regular market hours.

Most perpetual products are offered on offshore exchanges and aren’t regulated in the way traditional commodity exchanges such as ICE and CME Group Inc are in the US. Michael Selig, the chair of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), has said recently that he hopes to bring them under the agency’s oversight soon.

Hyperliquid, a fast-growing crypto exchange, started offering contracts tied to real-world assets including crude.

See also: AI-fuelled rally puts S&P 500 on track for eighth weekly gain

CME and ICE have been pushing regulators including the CFTC to rein in Hyperliquid, Bloomberg reported last week.

In a sign of the convergence of crypto and traditional financial firms, ICE and OKX struck a deal in March, where both firms said they would work together to build technology, including blockchain networks, that would give ICE’s customers access to crypto-based futures and OKX customers the ability to trade tokenised securities on NYSE’s platform.

OKX, which has an on-chain wallet and marketplace, is headquartered in San Jose, California, for the Americas and in Dubai for the Middle East.

The new perpetual contracts based on ICE’s data “allow OKX’s customer base of 120 million retail traders to access energy benchmark products,” said Trabue Bland, senior vice president of futures exchanges at ICE.

Uploaded by Felyx Teoh

×
The Edge Singapore
Download The Edge Singapore App
Google playApple store play
Keep updated
Follow our social media
© 2026 The Edge Publishing Pte Ltd. All rights reserved.