OKX and Intercontinental Exchange are bringing traditional oil benchmarks into crypto markets through new perpetual futures tied to Brent crude and WTI prices.
Key Takeaways
- OKX plans to launch perpetual futures based on ICE Brent Crude and WTI Crude benchmarks.
- The products will only be available in jurisdictions where OKX is licensed to offer perpetual futures trading.
- The launch marks the first major product collaboration between ICE and OKX since their strategic partnership announced in March 2026.
- The move highlights growing interest in connecting traditional financial benchmarks with crypto native trading infrastructure.
What Happened?
Crypto exchange OKX and Intercontinental Exchange (ICE), the parent company of the New York Stock Exchange, announced plans to launch oil linked perpetual futures products based on ICE’s globally recognized Brent crude and West Texas Intermediate benchmarks.
The new contracts are expected to allow retail traders on OKX to gain exposure to key energy markets through perpetual futures products in regulated jurisdictions where the exchange is authorized to offer such services.
ICE and OKX to Launch Perpetual Oil Futures Based on Brent and WTI
Bloomberg reported that Intercontinental Exchange (ICE), owner of the NYSE, is partnering with crypto exchange OKX to launch perpetual oil futures tied to Brent crude and WTI benchmarks. The contracts, which… pic.twitter.com/1ppWEZjncr
— Wu Blockchain (@WuBlockchain) May 22, 2026
ICE and OKX Deepen Strategic Partnership
The launch represents the first product collaboration between the two companies since ICE established a strategic relationship with OKX in March 2026. At the time, ICE reportedly took a minority stake in the crypto exchange, which was valued at around $25 billion, according to Bloomberg.
ICE operates some of the world’s largest exchanges and clearing platforms across commodities, equities, fixed income, and energy markets. Its Brent crude benchmark is widely used as the pricing standard for nearly three quarters of globally traded oil.
Under the partnership, ICE’s benchmark prices for Brent and WTI crude oil will power the new perpetual contracts on OKX.
Trabue Bland, Senior Vice President, Futures Exchanges at ICE said:
Retail Traders Gain Access to Oil Markets
Perpetual futures, commonly known as perps, are among the most popular derivatives products in the crypto market. Unlike traditional futures contracts, perpetual futures do not expire and instead rely on funding rate mechanisms to keep prices aligned with spot markets.
The products have become dominant across crypto exchanges because they allow traders to maintain positions continuously without dealing with contract expiry dates.
Haider Rafique, Global Managing Partner at OKX, said the launch is designed to bridge traditional finance and digital asset infrastructure. Rafique said:
Traditional Finance Expands Into Crypto Infrastructure
The launch comes amid rising interest in tokenized finance, regulated derivatives, and real world asset products within crypto markets.
Traditional financial institutions and benchmark providers have increasingly started licensing market data and indices to crypto native platforms. Bloomberg noted that S&P Dow Jones Indices previously licensed the S&P 500 index to TradeXYZ for perpetual derivatives trading on decentralized exchange Hyperliquid.
ICE’s move with OKX follows a similar strategy but through a regulated centralized exchange where ICE also holds an ownership stake.
At the same time, competition in oil linked crypto derivatives has intensified. Exchanges such as Binance and Bybit have already introduced perpetual contracts tied to commodities including Brent crude, WTI crude, and natural gas.
The expansion of oil trading products in crypto markets has also coincided with rising geopolitical tensions and increased volatility in global energy prices, particularly around the Strait of Hormuz.
Regulatory Attention on Commodity Linked Crypto Trading
The broader growth of commodity linked perpetual futures has attracted attention from regulators and traditional market operators.
Hyperliquid, a decentralized derivatives exchange, recently emerged as one of the largest derivatives trading platforms by volume. Reports suggest ICE and CME Group urged US regulators earlier this month to examine Hyperliquid’s role in commodity trading due to concerns around its anonymous and unregulated structure.
The companies reportedly warned that unregulated oil and gas trading platforms could pose risks to critical energy markets and sanctions enforcement.
CoinLaw’s Takeaway
In my experience, this partnership shows how quickly the line between traditional finance and crypto trading is disappearing. Major institutions like ICE are no longer treating crypto as a separate industry. Instead, they are actively using blockchain based platforms to distribute financial products to a global retail audience.
I found the most important part of this announcement is not just the oil contracts themselves, but the fact that one of the world’s biggest exchange operators is now directly supporting crypto native perpetual futures markets. That signals growing confidence in regulated crypto infrastructure and could encourage more traditional assets to enter digital trading platforms in the coming years.
