The Commodity Futures Trading Commission streamlined regulatory compliance for prediction markets Thursday, issuing a no-action letter that eliminates individual approval requirements for event contract data reporting.
The regulatory relief applies to all existing beneficiaries of previous no-action letters and establishes a simplified process for new entrants. Rather than seeking individual guidance, entities can now request identical treatment and be added to the letter's appendix upon approval by the divisions.
The technical distinction matters because event contracts—binary-outcome instruments popular on prediction markets—technically qualify as "swaps" under regulatory definitions. But the CFTC acknowledged these contracts function more like futures, with "highly-standardized terms, exchange-trading protocols, fungibility, and offset," according to the letter. This classification allows operators to use simpler reporting formats designed for futures rather than complex swap documentation.
The 19 named beneficiaries represent a cross-section of the evolving prediction market landscape, from crypto-native platforms to traditional derivatives exchanges expanding into event contracts. The comprehensive list signals regulatory acceptance of these instruments as legitimate financial products requiring consistent treatment.
The CFTC noted that while event contracts meet the technical definition of swaps due to their binary-outcome structure, they trade on designated contract markets rather than swap execution facilities—a key distinction that justified the streamlined approach.
The Division of Market Oversight and Division of Clearing and Risk jointly issued Thursday's guidance after receiving multiple requests from exchanges seeking clarity on compliance requirements, it said in an announcement. The coordinated response reflects institutional demand for prediction markets, which have expanded beyond political forecasting into economic indicators, sports outcomes, and cultural events.
The CFTC and prediction markets
The move comes as the CFTC jockeys with states over which has authority to regulate prediction markets, with multiple states arguing that the platforms subvert local gambling and gaming laws. CFTC Chair Michael Selig has vowed to sue any state that attempts to regulate prediction markets under its own gambling laws, claiming that the agency has exclusive regulatory authority over the platforms.
Selig has argued that unclear regulation could drive prediction markets offshore into unregulated space, risking FTX-style “implosions.” But the CFTC Chair has faced bipartisan pushback from lawmakers amid controversies around insider trading and war-related wagers on the platforms.
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