CFTC Moves to Rein In Prediction Markets With Guidance, Rulemaking Review

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CFTC Moves to Rein In Prediction Markets With Guidance, Rulemaking Review
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In brief

The CFTC has issued a staff advisory to exchanges and has launched an Advanced Notice of Proposed Rulemaking seeking public comment.
Chairman Michael Selig said the agency will defend its jurisdiction over event-contract markets as states increasingly challenge platforms tied to sports outcomes.
The move comes as courts, lawmakers, and regulators debate whether sports prediction markets should be treated as financial derivatives or gambling.

The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission launched a two-pronged regulatory push Thursday, moves Chairman Michael Selig framed as the agency finally stepping up after years of inaction.

The CFTC’s Division of Market Oversight’s Letter No. 26-08, published Thursday, directs registered exchanges on compliance and product listing requirements for event contracts, derivatives whose payouts hinge on real-world outcomes, from sports results to political elections.

The commission also published an Advanced Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, or ANPRM, inviting public comment on whether it needs to write new rules or amend existing ones for prediction market oversight, with comments due within 45 days of Federal Register publication.

“Prediction markets are here to stay, and under my leadership, I’ll protect the agency’s jurisdiction over these markets and allow them to flourish in the U.S.,” Selig posted on X.



The twin actions come as the CFTC scrambles to assert control over a sector it claims falls squarely within its mandate, but which states increasingly view as unlicensed sports gambling operating behind a financial-instrument fig leaf. 

Peter Hammon, an attorney and advisor in the online gaming and sports betting industry, told Decrypt that the overall picture is less dramatic than it appears.

“Selig/CFTC mostly restated current regulations without offering any opinions or new ideas and then asked for input from stakeholders,” he said.

Hammon said two takeaways stood out: that Selig appears to see responsible gambling as “a serious PR problem,” and that the remarks acknowledge prediction markets are “not a novel idea,” noting similar platforms have operated under regulation in the U.S. and overseas for decades.

“There is mostly no dispute over CFTC’s regulatory authority over prediction markets that don’t involve sporting events,” he said. “The dispute is whether or not CFTC should be allowed to classify sports prediction markets as a financial asset class, instead of as sports betting.” 

He noted that every other Western country with regulated gambling and financial markets opts to classify the activity as gambling. 

“Maybe there is something unique to the American system or American financialization psyche,” he said, “but I’ve yet to hear that argument articulated by stakeholders.”

Nominated by President Donald Trump to the Chair post, Selig has spent the past month publicly warning states that the CFTC will defend its turf in court. The agency has already filed an amicus brief in the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in support of Crypto.com. 

In announcing the rulemaking last week at the FIA Global Cleared Markets Conference in Florida, Selig said the agency was “no longer going to sit idly while these markets develop within our framework” and that prediction markets are “now viewed by the public as more accurate than political polls.”

The advisory reminds exchanges that insider trading and manipulation rules apply to event contracts, warning that it is unlawful to “defraud” or manipulate prices, including through the misuse of confidential information.

It also flags risks in sports contracts tied to injuries or single-player actions, urging exchanges to coordinate with leagues and warning the CFTC can halt listings if contracts fail compliance standards.

“The only genuine threat to sports prediction markets is a negative Supreme Court ruling,” Hammon noted. 

State-level licensing has already been tried and failed, he added, “largely due to high gaming excise taxes, lack of liquidity, and cumbersome rules regarding liquidity pooling across state lines,” meaning a Supreme Court loss would likely kill the business model outright.

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