The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) issued its first staff guidance on prediction markets and launched a public rulemaking process, ending years of regulatory silence on event contracts.
The move follows rapid growth in prediction market platforms used by millions of Americans, with the agency now signaling it wants to encourage innovation while enforcing existing compliance obligations.
Why it matters:
- Designated Contract Markets (DCMs) now have clearer obligations under CEA section 5(d) and Part 38, reducing legal uncertainty for platform operators.
- The Advanced Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (ANPRM) opens the door to new rules that could reshape how prediction markets are structured and supervised.
- Sports-related event contracts receive specific guidance, flagging a category that regulators have historically treated with extra scrutiny.
The details:
- The CFTC’s Division of Market Oversight issued the prediction markets advisory covering event contract listing requirements and DCM core principles.
- The advisory addresses DCM Core Principle 3, Appendix C guidance, and product submission requirements for event contracts.
- CFTC Chair Mike Selig said the agency “failed to provide guidance for these markets being used by millions of Americans,” until now.
- The ANPRM seeks public comment on whether existing rules are sufficient or whether new regulations are needed.
The big picture:
- According to Crypto America podcast host Eleanor Terrett, the guidance marks the first time the CFTC has formally addressed how exchanges should comply with existing event contract rules.
- Chair Selig called prediction markets “one of the most exciting innovations in financial markets,” signaling a pro-growth posture from the agency.
The post CFTC Breaks Silence on Prediction Markets With First Staff Guidance appeared first on BeInCrypto.
