US regulators warn of bitcoin futures dangers
The US Commodity Futures Trading Commission issued statement on "risks of virtual currency trading”

The warning underscores that even as Washington makes it easier for bitcoin to move out of the shadows, worries remain that the mom-and-pop investors who’ve helped fuel its rise have little idea what they’re jumping into. Some of the biggest names in finance have called the digital currency everything from a massive bubble to an outright fraud.
Two weeks ago, the CFTC enabled a watershed for bitcoin by announcing that CME Group Inc. and Cboe Global Markets Inc. would start offering bitcoin derivatives: a move that has helped fuel an 80 per cent jump in the spot market.
Although the futures products didn’t technically require regulatory approval, the CFTC could have stymied the exchanges’ plans if it wasn’t satisfied with them. The agency let them go forward, and trading on the CME is set to start Sunday after a Cboe contract listed earlier this week. The exchanges got the green light after going through a process called self-certification -- a pledge to the CFTC that the contracts don’t run afoul of the law.
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