A sharp oil rally in recent weeks has highlighted how slowly
top crypto exchanges roll out new derivatives, according to TradingView Chief
Growth Officer Rauan Khassan.
Singapore Summit: Meet the largest APAC brokers you know (and those you still don't!)
Speaking on dYdX Foundation’s March analyst call,
Khassan said few of the top‑10 crypto venues listed oil perpetuals even as prices
spiked. This has left newer platforms, such as Polymarket and Hyperliquid, to move
first.
Commodities Demand and Usage Split
CME’s push into around‑the‑clock crypto derivatives and
energy exposure supports Khassan’s criticism
of slow product rollout on major crypto venues. The Wall Street Journal
recently reported how CME is preparing to offer more flexible, nearly 24/7
access to oil and other commodity futures as demand grows for instruments that
trade through geopolitical shocks and weekend newsflow.
According to Khassan, traditional stocks and listed futures still
generate the largest share of TradingView activity, but crypto consistently
accounts for 35–40 percent of user engagement on the platform. Over the past 12
months, he described the main theme as “all around commodities,” led by gold
and then oil.
Additionally, internal TradingView data from November showed tether‑backed
gold symbols had just crossed 1 million unique users, compared with 4–5 million users looking at classic gold CFD symbols.
As of Wednesday, gold was up nearly 2% at 4,555 dollars per ounce after rebounding more than 450 dollars from Monday’s lows in less than 48 hours.
UPDATE: Gold gains over 2 percent as dollar weakens and oil prices drop
🔴 LIVE updates: https://t.co/GFAyl8kCfk pic.twitter.com/tWN12cxS5p
— Al Jazeera Breaking News (@AJENews) March 25, 2026
That
implies crypto‑backed commodity products currently operate at under 20
percent of the audience that legacy instruments reach on TradingView.
Keep reading: Scope Prime Rolls Out 24/7 Gold CFD to All Institutional Clients
He added that several exchanges first tried to capture
commodities interest by adding CFDs in ways that complicated their platforms,
and are now shifting to a more systematic use of perpetual and futures
contracts.
Yet when oil rallied, most large exchanges still did not
offer oil perps, even though around 80 percent of users typically wait for
their main venue to list new instruments instead of switching to niche
platforms.
However, a few specialist and derivatives‑heavy
exchanges already list oil and broader energy perpetuals, proving that the
instruments are technically and operationally feasible on crypto rails.
For instance, BitMEX has listed a WTIUSDT perpetual swap with up to
25x leverage
Leverage
In financial trading, leverage is a loan supplied by a broker, which facilitates a trader in being able to control a relatively large amount of money with a significantly lesser initial investment. Leverage therefore allows traders to make a much greater return on investment compared to trading without any leverage. Traders seek to make a profit from movements in financial markets, such as stocks and currencies.Trading without any leverage would greatly diminish the potential rewards, so traders
In financial trading, leverage is a loan supplied by a broker, which facilitates a trader in being able to control a relatively large amount of money with a significantly lesser initial investment. Leverage therefore allows traders to make a much greater return on investment compared to trading without any leverage. Traders seek to make a profit from movements in financial markets, such as stocks and currencies.Trading without any leverage would greatly diminish the potential rewards, so traders
Read this Term, giving traders linear USDT‑margined exposure to West Texas
Intermediate crude without holding the underlying.
DeFi Adoption and UX Friction
Khassan also argued that decentralized exchanges failed to
convert the 2022 Luna and FTX crises into lasting retail adoption, despite
running and available at the time.
He said insiders see DEX onboarding as simple—open a wallet,
connect it, then trade—but “two extra steps” remain enough to deter the “simple
guy” retail trader. In his view, this user preference for the easiest possible
onboarding path explains why centralized platforms continue to dominate retail
volumes despite repeated stress events in the sector.
Recently, the collapsed crypto exchange FTX announced that it will begin a fourth round of creditor payouts on 31 March 2026, advancing its Chapter 11 plan after returning about $12 billion across two earlier distributions last year.
A sharp oil rally in recent weeks has highlighted how slowly
top crypto exchanges roll out new derivatives, according to TradingView Chief
Growth Officer Rauan Khassan.
Singapore Summit: Meet the largest APAC brokers you know (and those you still don't!)
Speaking on dYdX Foundation’s March analyst call,
Khassan said few of the top‑10 crypto venues listed oil perpetuals even as prices
spiked. This has left newer platforms, such as Polymarket and Hyperliquid, to move
first.
Commodities Demand and Usage Split
CME’s push into around‑the‑clock crypto derivatives and
energy exposure supports Khassan’s criticism
of slow product rollout on major crypto venues. The Wall Street Journal
recently reported how CME is preparing to offer more flexible, nearly 24/7
access to oil and other commodity futures as demand grows for instruments that
trade through geopolitical shocks and weekend newsflow.
According to Khassan, traditional stocks and listed futures still
generate the largest share of TradingView activity, but crypto consistently
accounts for 35–40 percent of user engagement on the platform. Over the past 12
months, he described the main theme as “all around commodities,” led by gold
and then oil.
Additionally, internal TradingView data from November showed tether‑backed
gold symbols had just crossed 1 million unique users, compared with 4–5 million users looking at classic gold CFD symbols.
As of Wednesday, gold was up nearly 2% at 4,555 dollars per ounce after rebounding more than 450 dollars from Monday’s lows in less than 48 hours.
UPDATE: Gold gains over 2 percent as dollar weakens and oil prices drop
🔴 LIVE updates: https://t.co/GFAyl8kCfk pic.twitter.com/tWN12cxS5p
— Al Jazeera Breaking News (@AJENews) March 25, 2026
That
implies crypto‑backed commodity products currently operate at under 20
percent of the audience that legacy instruments reach on TradingView.
Keep reading: Scope Prime Rolls Out 24/7 Gold CFD to All Institutional Clients
He added that several exchanges first tried to capture
commodities interest by adding CFDs in ways that complicated their platforms,
and are now shifting to a more systematic use of perpetual and futures
contracts.
Yet when oil rallied, most large exchanges still did not
offer oil perps, even though around 80 percent of users typically wait for
their main venue to list new instruments instead of switching to niche
platforms.
However, a few specialist and derivatives‑heavy
exchanges already list oil and broader energy perpetuals, proving that the
instruments are technically and operationally feasible on crypto rails.
For instance, BitMEX has listed a WTIUSDT perpetual swap with up to
25x leverage
Leverage
In financial trading, leverage is a loan supplied by a broker, which facilitates a trader in being able to control a relatively large amount of money with a significantly lesser initial investment. Leverage therefore allows traders to make a much greater return on investment compared to trading without any leverage. Traders seek to make a profit from movements in financial markets, such as stocks and currencies.Trading without any leverage would greatly diminish the potential rewards, so traders
In financial trading, leverage is a loan supplied by a broker, which facilitates a trader in being able to control a relatively large amount of money with a significantly lesser initial investment. Leverage therefore allows traders to make a much greater return on investment compared to trading without any leverage. Traders seek to make a profit from movements in financial markets, such as stocks and currencies.Trading without any leverage would greatly diminish the potential rewards, so traders
Read this Term, giving traders linear USDT‑margined exposure to West Texas
Intermediate crude without holding the underlying.
DeFi Adoption and UX Friction
Khassan also argued that decentralized exchanges failed to
convert the 2022 Luna and FTX crises into lasting retail adoption, despite
running and available at the time.
He said insiders see DEX onboarding as simple—open a wallet,
connect it, then trade—but “two extra steps” remain enough to deter the “simple
guy” retail trader. In his view, this user preference for the easiest possible
onboarding path explains why centralized platforms continue to dominate retail
volumes despite repeated stress events in the sector.
Recently, the collapsed crypto exchange FTX announced that it will begin a fourth round of creditor payouts on 31 March 2026, advancing its Chapter 11 plan after returning about $12 billion across two earlier distributions last year.