Legal Sidebari 
 
CFTC and Virtual Currencies: New Court 
Rulings and Implications for Congress 
Updated December 6, 2018 
Over the past few months, several federal district courts have ruled in favor of the Commodity Futures 
Trading Commission (CFTC) in its first wave of fraud-based enforcement actions involving Bitcoin and 
other virtual currencies (also referred to as digital currencies, cryptocurrencies, digital tokens or digital 
coins). With several district court j
udges now agreeing with the CFTC’s position that virtual currencies 
are “commodities” as defined in the Commodity Exchange Act (CEA or Act), new legal authority 
supports the CFTC’s efforts in enforcing against fraud and manipulation, in addition to carrying out 
certain other powers, in the virtual currency realm. With these new rulings come possible new legal 
questions that Congress may consider, including the decisions’ implications for the CFTC’s enforcement 
authority and the overall scheme of regulation for digital coins. Moreover, as discussed further below, the 
new case law, coupled with enforcement activity underway by the Securities and Exchange Commission 
(SEC) with respect to digital coins, means that the CFTC shares regulatory authority in the 
cryptocurrency space with several other regulators. This Sidebar addresses these issues by providing 
background on the CFTC’s regulatory role and discussing the recent judicial opinions concerning its 
authority over virtual currencies, before highlighting areas of potential overlap–as well as gaps–existing 
in the current federal regulatory framework for virtual currencies.  
CFTC Authority Under the Commodity Exchange Act 
T
he CFTC is the primary federal agency charged with overseeing markets in derivatives—i.e., financial 
contracts that “derive” their value by reference to an underlying asset (or rate or index), whose prices rise 
or fall based on fluctuations in the value of that underlying asset. Derivative contracts generally stand in 
contrast to, for example, contracts for the sale of a good or asset that is itself promptly delivered to the 
other party. The CFTC has regulatory authority over derivatives including commodity
 futures, options, 
and (more recently as a result o
f Dodd-Frank) swaps. T
he CEA regulates trading in commodity futures 
and contains the statutory framework under which the CFTC operates. (It should be noted that the CFTC 
generally
 does not have regulatory oversight authority ov
er “spot” trading, as opposed to derivatives 
trading, in commodities). For example, the CEA requires the registration of exchanges and platforms for 
trading in certain derivatives, such as
 designated contract markets (i.e., futures exchanges) and
 swap 
execution facilities (i.e., systems or platforms for multiple participants to engage in swap trading).  
Congressional Research Service 
https://crsreports.congress.gov 
LSB10227 
CRS Legal Sidebar 
Prepared for Members and  
 Committees of Congress 
 
  
 
Congressional Research Service 
2 
The CFTC’s
 enforcement authority under the CEA also allows it to police against fraud and manipulation 
(i.e., “any manipulative or deceptive device or contrivance”) in the sale of futures, swaps, and 
commodities. This anti-fraud enforcement power is somewhat broader than the CFTC’s general oversight 
authority over derivatives in the sense that it extends beyond derivatives contracts to any “contract of sale 
of any 
commodity in interstate commerce.” The CEA’s anti-fraud provision, which Congress
 expanded 
thro
ugh Dodd-Frank, generally
 requires the CFTC to show that a defendant made a material false 
statement or omission with scienter in connection with a relevant transaction. (Some commentators note 
that it also appears the CFTC may be
 poised to enforce against insider trading in futures, swaps, and 
commodities under this provision and the CFTC’
s Rule 180.1 promulgated pursuant to Dodd-Frank.)  
Recent Anti-Fraud Cases and Virtual Currencies as Commodities 
As noted, over the past few months, several federal district courts have rendered favorable rulings for the 
CFTC as the agency has relied on the CEA’s anti-fraud provision to combat fraudulent conduct in 
connection with sales of virtual currencies. For example, in August, in
 CFTC v. McDonnell, the CFTC 
prevailed before a federal court in New York against a trader who misappropriated customers’ funds and 
made false statements regarding trading strategy and expected returns from purchases and sales of 
Bitcoin. A month later, i
n CFTC v. My Big Coin Pay, Inc., the CFTC, before a Massachusetts federal 
court, successfully opposed a motion to dismiss by defendants who had allegedly sold a virtual currency 
called “My Big Coin” to customers while falsely claiming that the currency was backed by gold, could be 
used wherever MasterCard was accepted, and was actively traded on currency exchanges. (A few weeks 
after that ruling, in
 CFTC v. Gelfman Blueprint, Inc., the CFTC also obtained a default judgment against 
defendants who had operated a Ponzi scheme in which they purported to execute sales of Bitcoin on 
behalf of customers through a sophisticated algorithmic program.) 
The 
McDonnell and 
My Big Coin decisions are notable because they relied on virtual currencies’ status as 
“commodities” as the basis for the CFTC’s enforcement power under the CEA (as neither case involved 
trading in derivatives), suggesting that the CFTC has broad authority to police against fraud in the sale of 
virtual currencies in interstate commerce. In this regard, the CEA’
s definition of “commodity” is very 
broad. Given the CFTC’s historical focus on futures in agricultural commodities, the definition first 
enumerates a host of agricultural goods (such as wheat, cotton, rice, etc.). 
A 1974 amendment to the Act, 
however, expanded the definition of commodity in order to
 reflect the evolving futures markets, allowing 
for CFTC regulation of the growing industry. The amendment therefore broadly specifies that the 
definition of commodity also includes “all other goods and articles . . . and all services, rights, and 
interests . . . in which contracts for future delivery are presently or in the future dealt in.” Because the 
CEA’s definition of “commodity” is linked to goods and articles traded in futures markets, it has 
expanded
 over time to include energy and metal commodities, as well as financial instruments, such as 
interest rates (e.g., LIBOR), stock indices, and foreign currencies. As the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 
Seventh Circuit noted in a 19
82 decision, “[b]y this amendment, literally anything other than onions 
[which were specifically exempted in the statute] could become a ‘commodity’ . . . simply by its futures 
being traded on some exchange.”  
The CFTC has taken the position that Bitcoin is a commodity for a number of years (dating back, for 
example, to its Chairperson’s
 testimony before a congressional committee in 2014 and its finding in a 
2015
 administrative action that a Bitcoin options and futures trading platform violated the Act by failing 
to register), a view now bolstered by the recent anti-fraud rulings. Earlier this year, Senior Judge Jack B. 
Weinstein issued an opinion in the 
McDonnell case, in which 
he reasoned that the Bitcoins at issue 
qualified as commodities, both under the common usage of the term (as “goods exchanged in a market for 
a uniform quality and value”) and under the CEA
, noting, among other things, the trading of Bitcoin 
futures on certain major exchanges. Similarly, in 
My Big Coin, a Massachusetts federal district court 
agreed with the CFTC that the virtual currency “My Big Coin” was a commodity subject to the CFTC’s 
  
Congressional Research Service 
3 
anti-fraud enforcement because it was undisputed that “contracts for future delivery of virtual currencies 
are ‘dealt in’”–namely looking to “the existence of Bitcoin futures contracts.” The court viewed virtual 
currencies as 
a class, rejecting the defendant’s argument that My Big Coins did not qualify as 
commodities because that specific virtual currency is not traded in futures markets. As a result, the logic 
of 
My Big Coin suggests that the CEA authorizes the CFTC to regulate fraud with respect to both well-
established cryptocurrencies, like Bitcoin, as well as other burgeoning digital coins.  
These rulings likely signal that the CFTC 
will continue to actively enforce against fraud and manipulation 
in the sale of a variety of virtual currencies. In addition, while not discussed further here, the CFTC has 
also ramped up efforts to tackle fraud in cases where defendants solicited virtual currency from customers 
as investments, for purposes of conducting trading in derivatives or other commodities that implicate the 
CFTC’s jurisdiction (for example, in
 CFTC v. Dean and
 CFTC v. Hunt). These additional cases indicate 
that the CFTC has also taken an interest in fraud and manipulation involving virtual currencies more 
broadly than cases strictly involving sales of the currencies themselves. 
Implications for Congress 
Particularly in light of the 
My Big Coin holding, the courts’ findings that virtual currencies are 
“commodities” raises several issues that Congress may consider. First, the rulings highlight the potential 
for regulatory overlap (and perhaps confusion) in the virtual currency realm. The 
McDonnell court 
explicitly
 noted that, unless Congress  “clarifies the matter, the CFTC has concurrent authority” over 
virtual currencies along with a host of other state and federal entities, including, in varying capacities, the 
SEC, the IRS, and the Department of the Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN). 
The
 SEC, for example, has taken th
e position that certain virtual currencies qualify as “securities,” subject 
to the federal securities laws under its purview, depending on the facts and circumstances. (For a detailed 
analysis of virtual currencies as securities and application of the federal securities laws to Initial Coin 
Offerings, see this report.)  
Second, the recent rulings, which solely pertained to the CFTC’s 
anti-fraud authority with respect to sales 
of virtual currencies, underscore the current patchwork nature of federal regulation of virtual currencies. 
For instance, because the CFTC generally do
es not have regulatory authority over spot “commodities” 
markets (apart from its powers to police against fraud and manipulation), as CFTC Chairman J. 
Christopher Giancarlo noted i
n testimony before the Senate Banking Committee earlier this year, “current 
law does not provide any U.S. Federal regulator with . . . regulatory authority over spot virtual currency 
platforms operating in the United States or abroad.” While some, like Chairman Giancarlo have urged 
Congress to consider legislation to expand the federal regulatory role on this front
, others believe that 
regulation could have negative impacts by stifling growth and innovation. 
Some congressional concerns regarding the regulatory framework for virtual currencies have endured in 
the 115th Congress, and are
 likely to be the subject of further debate in the 116th. 
A resolution introduced 
in the House of Representatives this fall entitled “Expressing support for digital currencies and blockchain 
technology” stated, among other things, that “United States Federal agencies should work toward a 
coordinated framework to support digital currencies . . . .” and highlighted the need to “allow[] consumer 
protection while supporting future innovation.” In that vein, two bills introduced on December 6, 2018 
would require the CFTC to submit reports to Congress on topics including, respectively, (1) price 
manipulation in virtual curre
ncies (H.R. 7224) and (2) regulation of virtual currency markets in the 
United States as compared with other coun
tries (H.R. 7225). Of particular relevance to the issues raised in 
this Sidebar, the latter report would include a “clarif[ication] [of when] virtual currencies . . . qualify as 
commodities” and “provide a new, optional regulatory structure for virtual currency spot markets.” 
Other individual bills addressing virtual currency introduced in the 115th Congress have largely 
focused on the specific issues of detecting money laundering through virtual currencies (for
  
Congressional Research Service 
4 
 exam
ple, H.R. 5036) or virtual currencies’ treatment for tax purposes (for exam
ple, H.R. 3708). 
Nonethel
ess, commentators have predicted that more comprehensive reform may soon be on the 
congressional agenda.   
Author Information 
 Nicole Vanatko 
   
Legislative Attorney  
 
 
 
Disclaimer 
This document was prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS). CRS serves as nonpartisan shared staff 
to congressional committees and Members of Congress. It operates solely at the behest of and under the direction of 
Congress. Information in a CRS Report should not be relied upon for purposes other than public understanding of 
information that has been provided by CRS to Members of Congress in connection with CRS’s institutional role. 
CRS Reports, as a work of the United States Government, are not subject to copyright protection in the United 
States. Any CRS Report may be reproduced and distributed in its entirety without permission from CRS. However, 
as a CRS Report may include copyrighted images or material from a third party, you may need to obtain the 
permission of the copyright holder if you wish to copy or otherwise use copyrighted material. 
 
LSB10227 · VERSION 3 · UPDATED