Brett Harrison, a former president of the closed FTX US exchange, has secured $35 million to build a new derivatives enterprise. The financing is a pointer of freshBrett Harrison, a former president of the closed FTX US exchange, has secured $35 million to build a new derivatives enterprise. The financing is a pointer of fresh

Former FTX Exchange President Raises $35M to Launch Derivatives Platform

  • Former FTX US president Brett Harrison raises $35M for a new derivatives platform.
  • Architect gains Bermuda approval to offer perpetual futures on traditional assets.
  • Crypto derivatives dominate trading volumes, heightening liquidity and volatility risks.

Brett Harrison, a former president of the closed FTX US exchange, has secured $35 million to build a new derivatives enterprise. The financing is a pointer of fresh investor confidence in crypto-related market infrastructure. It also indicates sustained venture interest in institutional trading platforms, despite the volatility and regulatory review of the sector in the recent past.

The Information reported that Harrison’s startup, Architect Financial Technologies, plans to invest the capital in an institutional-grade trading platform. The platform will enable derivatives, equity, futures, and digital assets. The purpose of the company is to connect the traditional finance market and the crypto market with the same trading system.

FTX Collapse and Architect’s Regulated Perps

Round participants were Miax, Tioga Capital, ARK Investment, Galaxy, and VanEck. The blend indicates the support of both conventional operators of the market and crypto-oriented companies. The investment is based on a raising that started in 2024, after a funding round of $12 million involving Coinbase Ventures and Circle Ventures, among others, and SALT Fund.

The funding follows the regulatory approval that Architect received in Bermuda. The license will enable the firm to provide perpetual futures contracts associated with conventional assets. These are the stocks, commodities, and foreign currencies. BitMEX was the first exchange to popularize perpetual futures, which are also referred to as perps. It was subsequently turned into a flagship product at the now-collapsed FTX.

Also Read: BlackRock’s Big Bet on Bitcoin: A Sign of Institutional Adoption in 2025

Architect will be oriented towards professional and corporate traders. The platform will be providing algorithmic trading platforms and sophisticated risk management indicators, as well as multi-asset derivative provisions. The company has also been giving indications that it is going to move outside of Bermuda. Its targeted markets are Europe and the Asia-Pacific region.

S&P Global Flags Liquidity Risks in Derivatives Markets

Derivatives represent the largest markets in global finance. It is estimated that there is a notional value of outstanding contracts that can run into hundreds of trillions of dollars. This is many times higher in terms of economic output in the world. The scale puts emphasis on the reasons why liquidity and quality of infrastructure are still imperative.

According to an S&P Global report in February, derivative markets are in the process of evolving. However, most asset classes still exhibit imbalanced liquidity. Investors are becoming more concerned with highly liquid products with narrow bid-ask.

Derivatives trading has been extensively adopted in the crypto industry. It is estimated that derivatives cover 75 to 80% of all exchanges. This preeminence has intensified risk exposure. On the 10th of October, the liquidation event felt its impact, wiping out about $19 billion in one day.

Also Read: FTX Collapse: $10M Silvergate Bank Settlement for Affected Investors

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