The CFTC Office of Inspector General on Tuesday named digital asset regulation a top management and performance risk for fiscal 2026. The report said pending legislation could sharply expand the agency’s responsibilities, per the Office of Inspector General report.
Staffing fell from about 708 full-time employees at the end of fiscal 2024 to roughly 556 by fiscal 2025. (Ed. note: this equals about a 21.5% reduction.)
“The CFTC is the most institutionally aligned regulator for crypto derivatives and prediction markets, but its mandate and resourcing were not designed for always-on, decentralized spot markets,” said Vincent Liu, chief investment officer at Kronos Research.
The proposed CLARITY Act seeks clearer boundaries between regulators and would assign the CFTC authority over crypto spot markets. Negotiations stalled after last-minute changes, pushback from Coinbase, and Senate disagreements over jurisdiction and enforcement.
“On-chain prediction markets will likely survive through compliance-aware architectures that allow selective transparency, enabling regulators to verify legality and market integrity without exposing all user activity,” said Rob Viglione, CEO of Horizen Labs. These markets operate globally and raise novel legal and institutional questions.
The report says meaningful oversight will require hiring, technical expertise, and new data systems as the mandate grows more complex. The agency was contacted for comment.

