Cboe Digital Review

Updated: March 28, 2026
Cboe Digital
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Fast Facts

Contact Info and Support

Traffic information

CategoryMetricsMeaning
RatingsGlobal Rank3620387
Country CodeUS
Country Rank1196849
Category Rank7271
Engagement metricsVisits4761
Bounce Rate0.4604
Pageviews per Visit1.75
Avg. Visit Duration26.52
Estimated monthly visitsDecember 20253336
January 20264679
February 20264761
Top countriesUnited States (US)74.71%
Brazil (BR)20.11%
India (IN)5.18%
Traffic sourcesDirect54.26%
Search26.04%
Social10.16%
Referrals7.58%
Paid Referrals1.35%
Mail0.12%
Top keywordscboe30060 ◦ $2.17 ◦ $210
spot and futures cryptocurrency exchange with erisx120 ◦ $110
erisx60 ◦ $80
cboe digital70 ◦ $70
cbo e1700 ◦ $2.35 ◦ $0

About Cboe Digital

Cboe Digital operates a U.S.‑based digital asset exchange and separate clearinghouse (Cboe Digital Exchange and Cboe Clear Digital). Its futures markets are regulated by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), holding both a Designated Contract Market (DCM) and Derivatives Clearing Organization (DCO) license. Futures contracts are physically delivered or cash-settled for Bitcoin and Ether. Spot market activity is treated as a Money Services Business (MSB) under FinCEN and is licensed as a money transmitter at the state level, operating in 51 U.S. states and jurisdictions. In New York, the clearing entity holds a virtual currency license (“BitLicense”). Cboe Clear Digital complies with CFTC DCO core principles, including segregation of customer assets. Futures contracts have been migrated to Cboe Futures Exchange (CFE) and cleared through Cboe Clear US.

Who it’s for

  • Institutional participants requiring regulatory oversight for digital asset trading and clearing across spot and futures markets, including segregated clearing operations.
  • Market participants seeking U.S.‑regulated Bitcoin and Ether futures products with physical delivery or cash settlement under CFTC oversight.
  • Users requiring operations under state transmitter licensing and New York BitLicense for compliant spot service access.

Pros and cons

Pros

  • Fully regulated U.S. infrastructure for both spot (MSB, state transmitters, BitLicense) and futures (CFTC DCM and DCO), ensuring high oversight and asset protection.
  • Separated exchange and clearinghouse structure offers segregation of customer assets and reduced counterparty risk.
  • Wide licensing coverage across U.S. states enhances accessibility and compliance.

Cons

  • No licensing or activity noted for traders outside of U.S. regulatory jurisdictions.
  • Spot market lacks direct federal regulation by the CFTC; oversight relies on state and MSB frameworks.

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