TLDR
- Coinbase Prime is rolling out unified cross-margin across spot and derivatives markets for institutional clients
- The platform will offer 24/7 access to more than 20 futures and perpetual contracts via its CFTC-regulated entity
- Cross-margin lets traders use a single collateral pool across positions instead of managing separate accounts
- The move is part of Coinbase’s push to become a full-service prime broker for institutional crypto clients
- Coinbase also acquired Deribit, aiming to add options trading to its institutional suite
Coinbase Prime, the institutional arm of the largest U.S. crypto exchange, is rolling out unified cross-margin and regulated futures across its spot and derivatives markets. The update was announced on Friday, March 6, 2026.
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Institutional clients on Ripple Prime can now trade crypto futures listed on Coinbase Derivatives, including Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, and XRP, as Ripple expands its institutional brokerage. pic.twitter.com/YJy3zxDins
— Coin Bureau (@coinbureau) March 6, 2026
The new functionality is powered by Coinbase Financial Markets, the company’s Futures Commission Merchant regulated by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. Through this entity, institutions will have 24/7 access to more than 20 futures contracts.
The rollout also includes perpetual-style futures products offered through Coinbase Derivatives. Coinbase expanded its perps offering late last year as competition among crypto exchanges for derivatives market share increased.
Derivatives currently account for roughly 70% to 75% of total crypto trading volume, according to Kraken’s Head of Derivatives.
The cross-margin update is a key part of this launch. Previously, institutions had to manage separate collateral pools for spot and futures trading, along with disconnected risk systems.
The new unified model allows traders to use their full account balance as shared collateral across all positions. Spot and futures exposures are now evaluated together within one portfolio framework.
This is especially useful for basis trades, a common strategy where traders hold a long spot position and a short futures position at the same time. Under the old system, each side required its own collateral.
How the Risk Model Works
Coinbase says its platform uses a deterministic risk model. This means institutions can calculate their margin requirements before placing a trade, rather than finding out after the fact.
This is a shift from what Coinbase calls “opaque margin engines,” which only reveal margin costs after orders are submitted. The change gives trading desks more control over position sizing and capital planning.
Client assets are held with Coinbase’s NYDFS-regulated qualified custodian. Futures trading runs through the CFTC-regulated entity, keeping all activity within a regulated structure.
Coinbase says it manages around 12% of total crypto market cap in custody. Competitors in the institutional prime brokerage space include FalconX, BitGo, and Digital Currency Group.
Coinbase’s Broader Push Into Institutional Services
Coinbase has been building out its full prime brokerage stack over the past year. The company refers to itself as the “Everything Exchange,” a label it started using in 2025 when it announced plans to expand into equities, tokenization, and prediction markets.
Coinbase rolled out stock trading across the U.S. last month.
The company also acquired Deribit, described as the world’s leading crypto options exchange. With Deribit, Coinbase aims to let institutions trade spot, futures, perpetuals, and options all within one connected platform.
Rick Schonberg, Coinbase’s Global Head of Product for Trading and Clearing, said Prime was “designed so institutions no longer have to self-assemble their trading infrastructure.”





