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Breaking: Coinbase Rolls Out Nano XRP & SOL Futures—US Crypto Traders Get Micro-Edge

Breaking: Coinbase Rolls Out Nano XRP & SOL Futures—US Crypto Traders Get Micro-Edge

Published:
2025-07-30 03:46:18
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Wall Street’s sleeping—Coinbase just handed retail traders scalp-sized leverage. Nano futures for XRP and SOL hit the platform today, slicing margin requirements to pocket-change levels.

Why it matters: When exchanges play nice with regulators, innovation gets drip-fed. These micro-contracts let traders punt on crypto’s most volatile assets without hocking their kidneys.

The catch? Fees still chew 20% of nano-position profits—some things never change in crypto casino capitalism.

What are Nano Futures?

Nano futures are just like regular crypto futures, except they’re designed with smaller contract sizes. Basically, these nano futures are easier for regular traders to use.

Futures are trades based on where a crypto’s price is headed, without owning the asset itself. Perpetual futures don’t have an expiry date; the position stays open, and a funding rate keeps adjusting it to match the actual market price.

XRP and SOL Futures: How They’ll Work

Coinbase’s new nano XRP futures contract will track the price of 500 XRP tokens per contract. It’ll be cash-settled in U.S. dollars, so no actual crypto changes hands. These contracts will technically expire in December 2030, but new ones will be launched monthly. Traders can hold up to 700,000 contracts, and pricing will MOVE in tiny increments, as small as $0.0001 per XRP.

As for nano SOL futures, each contract will represent 5 Solana tokens, with price moves in steps of $0.01. Like the XRP contracts, they’ll be settled in dollars and will also expire in December 2030. Traders can hold a maximum of 340,000 SOL contracts.

Why This Matters?

Crypto derivatives, especially perpetual futures, have become the backbone of trading activity on global exchanges. But U.S. regulators have made it hard for most platforms to offer these products domestically. Coinbase, however, is one of the few that has secured regulatory approval to do so through its CFTC-regulated arm, Coinbase Derivatives.

By offering smaller “nano” contracts, Coinbase is targeting everyday traders who want to manage risk or test out leverage in a safer, more regulated environment.

A Bigger Strategy at Play

This isn’t Coinbase’s first step into derivatives. The company launched nano Bitcoin and Ether futures earlier this year, with up to 10x leverage. In May 2025, Coinbase added SOL, XRP, and ADA (Cardano) to its 24/7 futures lineup, expanding its range of products. The two new nano contracts are now part of that growing offering.

XRP and Solana already have huge communities and high trading activity, so these new futures are likely to catch on fast, especially with U.S. traders who’ve had limited access to such tools until now.

Also Read: Coinbase Lists JITOSOL and MPLX on Solana Network

    

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