CFTC Moves to Defend Federal Jurisdiction Over Prediction Markets
The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) filed an amicus brief in federal court to assert the agency's exclusive authority to regulate prediction markets and event contracts. The brief, filed in the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, supports Crypto.com in its dispute with the Nevada Gaming Control Board and signals a broader CFTC strategy to resist state-level prohibitions.
> "We will see you in court." — CFTC Chairman Michael Selig
Key facts
- The CFTC says nearly 50 active legal cases involve prediction markets and event contracts.
- The agency characterizes many event contracts as "swaps" that fall within its existing regulatory regime.
- The Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals is a focal point for current litigation, including the Crypto.com–Nevada Gaming Control Board dispute.
What the CFTC argues
CFTC Chairman Michael Selig has made definitive statements that the agency has long held authority over prediction markets and that event contracts "serve legitimate economic functions." In a public op‑ed and subsequent comments, the chairman said the Commission will step in to "defend its exclusive jurisdiction over commodity derivatives" where jurisdictional questions arise.
Selig framed prediction markets as self‑regulatory trading platforms supervised by experienced CFTC staff, asserting that these products should be treated under the CFTC's swaps rules rather than as state‑level gambling. He wrote: "The CFTC will no longer sit idly by while overzealous state governments undermine the agency's exclusive jurisdiction over these markets by seeking to establish statewide prohibitions on these exciting products." He also described these exchanges as not being "the Wild West" but organizations overseen by the Commission.
Legal and market implications
- Jurisdictional precedent: A successful CFTC intervention in appellate courts would reinforce federal preemption over state gambling laws when event contracts meet the statutory elements of swaps and derivatives.
- Platform operations: Platforms such as Kalshi and Polymarket — already facing multi‑state legal challenges — would gain clearer regulatory covering under federal rules if courts accept the CFTC's view. That could ease compliance uncertainty but raise federal enforcement expectations.
- Commercial risk: State rulings that classify event contracts as gambling could still create localized enforcement risk and market fragmentation until appellate courts resolve preemption questions.
- Industry response: The CFTC has signaled willingness to draft clearer rules for prediction markets and to litigate jurisdictional disputes in federal and circuit courts, increasing regulatory certainty in the medium term but elevating enforcement scrutiny in the near term.
Practical takeaways for professional traders and institutional investors
- Monitor appellate filings: The Ninth Circuit docket, plus any Supreme Court interest, will be primary catalysts for sector clarity.
- Anticipate rulemaking: The CFTC has publicly signaled it may produce new rules for prediction markets; market participants should track rulemaking notices and comment periods for compliance timelines.
- Legal diversity remains: Expect uneven treatment across states until federal courts rule. Trading desks should assess counterparty and platform legal exposure as part of risk models.
- Liquidity and product design: Platforms may shift product types, contract terms, or counterparty protections to align with CFTC guidance or to mitigate state enforcement actions.
What to watch next (indicators and timelines)
- Ninth Circuit decisions and related appellate briefs in cases involving Crypto.com, Kalshi, and Polymarket.
- Any formal CFTC rulemaking proposals that define event contracts, swaps treatment, or reporting/clearing requirements for prediction markets.
- State enforcement actions and whether state regulators pursue injunctions or criminal referrals against platform operators.
- Platform disclosures and operational changes (product delistings or geographic restrictions) that signal defensive moves.
Market and regulatory context
Prediction markets pose a hybrid policy challenge: they offer price discovery and hedging tools for event risk while also inviting comparisons to traditional gambling when contracts are tied to elections, sports, or entertainment outcomes. The CFTC's assertion that these contracts can be classified as swaps places the debate in the framework of federal commodities law rather than state gambling statutes.
For institutional investors, the immediate implication is a shift from a patchwork compliance posture to one where federal regulatory design — and the pace of appellate adjudication — will increasingly determine where and how event contracts can be offered and traded.
Representative quotes
- "The CFTC will no longer sit idly by while overzealous state governments undermine the agency's exclusive jurisdiction over these markets by seeking to establish statewide prohibitions on these exciting products." — CFTC Chairman Michael Selig
- "These exchanges aren't the Wild West, as some critics claim, but self‑regulatory organizations that are examined and supervised by experienced CFTC staff." — CFTC Chairman Michael Selig
Bottom line
The CFTC's amicus brief and public statements signal an active federal strategy to assert jurisdiction over prediction markets and to resist state efforts to classify event contracts as gambling. For traders, institutional investors, and platform operators, the next 12–24 months of appellate rulings and any CFTC rulemaking will be decisive in shaping legal certainty, market structure, and compliance obligations.
Disclosure: CNBC and Kalshi have a commercial relationship that includes a CNBC minority investment.
