- CME plans to launch futures for ADA, LINK, and XLM on February 9.
- The expansion includes both micro and standard contract sizes.
- Growing CME crypto offerings point to rising institutional demand.
CME Group is preparing to expand its crypto derivatives offering again, announcing plans to launch futures contracts for Cardano (ADA), Chainlink (LINK), and Stellar (XLM) on February 9. The rollout, outlined in a Thursday press release, is still subject to regulatory approval and will include both micro and standard-sized contracts. For traders watching regulated access points, the move signals continued momentum rather than a one-off experiment.

A Slow but Steady Crypto Buildout
CME hasn’t rushed into digital assets, and that’s part of what makes this expansion notable. The exchange first entered crypto markets with Bitcoin futures back in December 2017, followed by Ether futures in early 2021. Since then, the product suite has grown methodically, adding exposure to assets that show sustained liquidity and institutional interest. Cardano, Chainlink, and Stellar now join that shortlist.
Building on XRP and Solana Momentum
The new contracts build on CME’s more recent additions, including XRP and Solana futures. Late last year, CME introduced options for both assets, giving traders access to more advanced hedging and risk-management strategies. Expanding into ADA, LINK, and XLM suggests the exchange sees deeper demand for diversified crypto exposure rather than concentration around just Bitcoin and Ether.

What This Signals for Market Maturity
CME’s decision reflects a broader shift in how crypto is being treated across financial markets. Regulated futures products appeal to both institutions and sophisticated retail traders who need transparent pricing, standardized contracts, and compliance-friendly access. As more digital assets make their way into CME’s lineup, crypto continues to move closer to being a normalized part of multi-asset trading portfolios, not a fringe allocation.











