
The CFTC’s first no-action letter for a self-custodial wallet and a joint SEC-CFTC move classifying XRP as a digital commodity give non-custodial XRP infrastructure a clearer path into regulated derivatives.
Summary
- The CFTC issued its first-ever no-action letter for a self-custodial crypto wallet provider on March 17, granting Phantom Technologies regulatory relief without requiring broker registration.
- XRP treasury firm Evernorth flagged the move as a pivotal moment for XRP, noting the ruling’s core principle — that non-custodial platforms are not financial intermediaries — aligns directly with XRP’s design architecture.
- XRP was simultaneously classified as a “digital commodity” in a joint SEC-CFTC framework released on March 17, pushing the token above $1.50 before it pulled back to $1.41.
A regulatory development that passed largely unnoticed last week is drawing fresh attention from the XRP (XRP) community. On March 24, XRP-focused treasury firm Evernorth flagged that the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission had quietly issued its first-ever no-action letter for a self-custodial crypto wallet software provider — a move Evernorth described as being “hidden by the SEC commodity classification” announced the same day.
The CFTC published Letter No. 26-09 on March 17, granting no-action relief to Phantom Technologies Inc., the developer behind the Phantom wallet — one of Solana’s most widely used self-custodial wallets. The letter stated that Phantom could facilitate derivatives trading access for its users without registering as an introducing broker or associated person, provided it never takes custody of user funds.
Evernorth summarized the significance of the ruling in a post on X: “The core principle: if you don’t hold customer funds, you’re not a financial intermediary.” The firm argued this framework has direct implications for XRP’s infrastructure, given Ripple’s long-standing design philosophy around non-custodial settlement.
Chart analyst @ChartNerdTA amplified Evernorth’s post with the headline “XRP Was DESIGNED For This,” pointing to the convergence of the CFTC no-action letter and XRP’s simultaneous commodity classification as compounding regulatory tailwinds for the token.
XRP Commodity Designation Provides Institutional Framework
On the same date as the Phantom letter, the SEC and CFTC issued a joint interpretive release classifying XRP as a “digital commodity,” formally placing the Ripple-associated token outside the scope of U.S. securities law. Ripple’s Chief Legal Officer Stuart Alderoty responded swiftly on X, stating: “We always knew XRP wasn’t a security — and now the @SECGov has made clear what it is: a digital commodity.”
XRP’s trading volume surged 125% to $3.22 billion on March 17 as the commodity designation was published, pushing its market cap to approximately $93.4 billion and briefly overtaking BNB’s position in the global rankings. The token is currently trading at $1.41, with a 24-hour volume of $2.29 billion and a market cap of $86.4 billion.
The Phantom no-action letter falls under CFTC Letter 26-09, issued by the agency’s Market Participants Division. It allows self-custodial wallets to offer front-end interfaces for CFTC-regulated derivatives — such as futures contracts on designated contract markets — without triggering broker registration requirements, as long as the wallet operator imposes proper risk disclosures, never controls user funds, and maintains records and compliance policies comparable to those of a registered introducing broker.
The implications for XRP are strategic rather than immediate. Evernorth noted that the ruling establishes a regulatory pathway for non-custodial platforms — like those built on the XRP Ledger — to interface with regulated derivatives markets without being reclassified as financial intermediaries. The firm described this as a “significant milestone, particularly for self-custody solutions.”
The CFTC‘s posture under newly confirmed Chairman Brian Quintenz has shifted toward a pro-innovation stance, with the agency advancing a Memorandum of Understanding with the SEC on March 11, 2026, to streamline oversight for dually registered firms and reduce regulatory fragmentation across digital asset markets.

