Acting CFTC Chair Caroline Pham transitions to private sector with MoonPay

Source Cryptopolitan

Caroline Pham is set to leave the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) after four years of employment. She will now work with MoonPay as its Chief Legal and Administrative Officer. 

With Caroline Pham’s exit from the CFTC to join the crypto payment company, MoonPay, Mike Selig, a crypto lawyer will fill her role. 

She follows a path walked by Bo Hines, former White House Crypto Council executive director, who joined Tether, as reported by Cryptopolitan. Hines reportedly now leads the firm’s US expansion activity, while tasked with maintaining compliance with the new requirements of the GENIUS bill.

Caroline Pham leaves the CFTC 

Caroline Pham, the acting chair of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), is moving to the crypto payments company called MoonPay after working at the commission for nearly four years. 

“I’m excited to join MoonPay at a pivotal moment,” Pham said in a statement

Pham’s new role involves overseeing all global legal and administrative functions while also leading the company’s policy and regulatory strategy in Washington. Pham’s role at CFTC will be filled by crypto lawyer, Mike Selig, who is now preparing for Senate confirmation. 

The final vote on his appointment is expected early next week.

Pham spent seven years at Citigroup, one of Wall Street’s largest banks before being confirmed as a Republican commissioner starting in 2022. She went on to be unanimously elected as acting chairman in January 2025. 

During her tenure, Pham encouraged modernization efforts at the CFTC through what she called the “Crypto Sprint,” a series of initiatives designed to bring regulatory clarity to digital asset markets. 

On December 4, she announced that listed spot crypto products would trade for the first time in U.S. federally regulated markets through CFTC-registered futures exchanges. She also launched a pilot program that allowed Bitcoin, Ether, and stablecoin USDC to be used as collateral in U.S. derivatives markets. 

Tokenized assets such as Treasuries and money market funds were also explored for the same purpose.

Last week, Pham said the agency would be withdrawing guidance focused on the “actual delivery” of digital assets, calling it “outdated and overly complex”. 

She also established the CFTC CEO Innovation Council, naming twelve CEOs to the forum and the Digital Asset Markets Pilot Program, launched on December 8, 2025. 

Her partnership with SEC Chair Paul Atkins resulted in improved collaboration between the two agencies, despite previous clashes over digital asset oversight. 

Why did MoonPay hire Pham?

MoonPay, founded by Ivan Soto-Wright, Victor Faramond and Maximilian Crown in 2019, is a Miami-based company that provides payment infrastructure for users to purchase cryptocurrencies and digital assets using traditional payment methods like credit cards, bank transfers, and mobile payment options.

The company reportedly has more than 30 million customers across 180 countries and supports more than 500 enterprise customers in both crypto and fintech industries. 

MoonPay raised $555 million in November 2021 in an investment round led by Tiger Global Management and Coatue Management. The deal valued MoonPay at $3.4 billion. In March 2025, the company acquired the crypto checkout startup, Helio, for $175 million and announced the acquisition of the stablecoin platform, Iron.

In the second half of 2025, MoonPay secured both its New York BitLicense and New York Limited Purpose Trust Charter. 

The company’s CEO, Ivan Soto-Wright, called Pham “one of the most influential leaders in U.S. financial regulation” and said her experience in regulatory expertise and traditional finance, as well as her deep understanding of market structure makes her “the perfect leader to guide MoonPay through our next chapter of growth and compliance excellence.”

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