Architect Financial Technologies, founded by former FTX US president Brett Harrison, plans to expand its perpetual futures exchange into artificial intelligence-linked markets. The firm said its institutional-focused platform, AX, is preparing to introduce perpetual futures contracts tied to GPU rental pricing and dynamic memory costs, pending regulatory approval. The products would mark the first exchange-traded futures contracts based on AI compute, according to the company.
The initiative extends Architect’s broader effort to adapt crypto-native derivatives structures, particularly non-expiring perpetual futures, to traditional and emerging asset classes. AX currently supports perpetual contracts linked to assets such as equities and foreign exchange, but does not offer crypto-linked derivatives. The platform operates through a Bermuda-regulated subsidiary and is available to non-US institutional participants.
Hedging Demand in AI Infrastructure
The compute-linked contracts are being developed in partnership with Ornn Data, which provides pricing benchmarks derived from live GPU transactions across multiple spot markets. The products are designed for AI companies, data center operators, hardware vendors, and lenders seeking tools to hedge volatility and depreciation risk tied to compute-intensive infrastructure. Positions will be marginable and funded using US dollars or dollar-denominated stablecoins.
Architect said it is working with market makers to support liquidity at launch, alongside data centers and compute buyers looking to manage exposure. Industry participants have faced limited options for price discovery as demand for AI training and inference capacity accelerates. Compute costs have become a growing factor in capital expenditure planning, particularly as investment in AI infrastructure scales globally.
Institutional Context and Competitive Landscape
The expansion comes as financial institutions explore how crypto-derived market structures can be applied to real-world assets under regulated frameworks. Continuous trading, capital efficiency, and centralized order books have drawn interest beyond digital assets, particularly in markets where pricing transparency remains limited.
Architect is backed by investors including Coinbase Ventures, Circle Ventures, and the SALT Fund, and raised $35 million in a Series A round in late 2025. The firm has positioned itself as a bridge between crypto-style market mechanics and traditional finance, targeting institutional participants operating outside US regulatory constraints.
As AI infrastructure becomes a critical input across industries, derivatives tied to compute pricing reflect broader efforts to financialize emerging technology markets. Whether these products gain sustained liquidity will depend on regulatory clarity and institutional adoption, but the move highlights growing overlap between crypto market design and traditional financial risk management.