On Wednesday, June 10, 2026, the CFTC moved prediction markets from regulatory improvisation toward a written rulebook, proposing its first U.S. rule for reviewing whether event contracts serve the “public interest,” according to CoinDesk.
That timing matters because Kalshi, Polymarket, Crypto.com and other prediction market operators are no longer niche forecasting toys in Washington’s eyes. Their contracts now touch sports, politics and other public events where the line between financial hedging, information markets and gambling gets blurry fast.
The proposal frames that shift as a move toward a more transparent review process for contracts that Congress directed the agency to scrutinize, while leaving room for legitimate markets to move forward.
June 10 proposal: the CFTC stops treating prediction markets as one-off fights
The Commodity Futures Trading Commission proposed a rule that would create a formal process for deciding when prediction market contracts are outside the public interest. The proposal will be open for public comment before it can be revised and finalized.
The agency is targeting a specific legal problem. Federal law says contracts involving war, terrorism, assassination, illegal activity and gaming can be deemed contrary to the public interest and blocked. Until now, the industry has lived with heavy uncertainty over how the CFTC would apply that standard to real products.
The proposal does not bless every contract. It gives the CFTC a clearer path to scrutinize, delay or prohibit listings.
That distinction matters. A contract on a sports score, an election result or a policy decision may look like a simple yes-or-no trade. But once money is attached to the outcome, regulators have to ask whether the market is generating useful price signals or creating incentives that Congress wanted the CFTC to police.
XOOMAR analysis: This is the CFTC trying to build a filter, not a rubber stamp. The agency is signaling that prediction markets can sit inside regulated derivatives infrastructure, but only if the contract design survives public-interest review.
From March comments to June rule text: how event contracts fit CFTC oversight
Prediction market contracts let traders buy and sell positions tied to whether a stated event occurs. A contract price can reflect the market’s aggregate expectation of that outcome, which is why regulators and platforms often describe these markets as information aggregation tools.
The CFTC’s March advance notice said prediction markets “function as information aggregation vehicles” because prices reflect participants’ aggregate beliefs about whether events will occur, according to the Federal Register notice. It also said some event contracts may fall within the Commodity Exchange Act definition of a swap, or may be futures contracts covered by the law.
That is why these markets don’t sit neatly beside polls, sports books or informal forecasting forums.
| Product type | What drives it | Why the CFTC cares |
|---|---|---|
| Polls | Survey responses | No tradable derivative contract |
| Sports books | Wagers under gambling frameworks | Gaming-law questions can arise |
| Informal forecasting sites | Reputation or play-money signals | Usually outside derivatives trading |
| CFTC-regulated event contracts | Tradable contracts on outcomes | May be swaps or futures under the CEA |
Registered exchanges are also central to the proposal. CoinDesk reported that platforms where event contracts trade are regulated exchanges under the CFTC, and the agency has said exchanges are the first line of defense in deciding whether contracts are legal and markets are not manipulated or abused.
For traders, that makes venue selection part of risk management. The lesson overlaps with broader retail trading hazards we’ve covered in No-Code Trading Platforms: Pick Wrong, Lose Fast: the interface can look simple while the market structure underneath carries the real risk.
The 90-day review: how the “public interest” test would work
The CFTC proposal weighs a 90-day review process for public-interest determinations on individual contracts.
Before banning a contract, the agency would apply a three-part test:
- Occurrence: The contract must be based on something occurring.
- Category: The contract must involve one of the categories that could place it outside the public interest.
- Commission decision: The CFTC must formally decide that the contract is contrary to the public interest.
The agency also gave an example showing that context matters. A contract settling on whether a specified volume of crude oil transits the Strait of Hormuz during a specified period would not automatically involve war or terrorism, even if military conditions affect oil flows, because the settlement trigger is commercial shipping activity.
That example is doing real work. It tells platforms that the CFTC will look at the settlement condition, not just the surrounding news environment.
The proposal also rejects a simple bright-line rule. Instead, the CFTC said a multi-factor approach lets it weigh potential harm or public benefit, including a contract’s hedging or price-basing utility and its potential to encourage illicit behavior.
XOOMAR analysis: That flexibility helps the agency avoid crude categories. It also leaves platforms with judgment risk. A contract can be objectively verifiable and still lose if the CFTC decides the public harm outweighs the informational or hedging value.
A candidate win versus a Fed cut: two contracts, different regulatory pressure points
Take two hypothetical listings.
One contract asks whether a specific candidate will win a federal election. Another asks whether a major interest-rate cut will happen before year-end. Both can be objectively resolved. Both may generate prices that users read as probabilities. But they don’t raise the same questions.
A policy-rate contract may have a clearer economic use case. Businesses and traders already care about rates. A prediction contract tied to a rate decision could, in theory, inform financial planning or hedging.
An election contract is more sensitive. CoinDesk noted the industry has drawn attention for popular sports and political betting. The CFTC proposal’s public-interest approach means the agency could ask whether a political contract resembles gaming, whether it creates unacceptable incentives around public processes, or whether the exchange can police manipulation and abuse.
Possible review outcomes include:
- More information: The CFTC can press the exchange on settlement terms, surveillance or compliance.
- Delay: A 90-day review could slow a listing that a platform wanted to launch quickly.
- Withdrawal: A platform may pull or revise a contract rather than force a confrontation.
- Prohibition: The commission can decide the contract is outside the public interest.
Sports contracts get especially notable treatment. The proposal says contracts settling on the overall outcome of a sporting event, including final scores, point differentials, win-loss results, tournament advancement, individual or team statistical performance or season-long performance metrics, would be factors against finding the contracts contrary to the public interest.
The CFTC added that these categories “may serve price discovery functions and provide meaningful information.”
That language is a strong signal. It doesn’t remove scrutiny, but it shows the agency is not treating sports outcomes as automatically disqualifying.
The next decision point: comments, revisions and a short-staffed commission
The proposal still has to move through public comments, possible revisions and completion before it takes effect. CoinDesk reported that it would go into effect within 60 days of completion.
The politics of the agency matter here. CoinDesk also reported that the CFTC is currently short four members, leaving it as a lone-chairman operation, even though the agency’s structure contemplates three commissioners from the majority party and two from the minority. Legal observers have suggested the agency’s policy work could be challenged at some stage.
For platforms, the practical questions are now sharper:
- Definitions: How broadly will the CFTC read gaming, illegal activity, war, terrorism and assassination?
- Discretion: How much room will the commission keep to reject novel contracts?
- Timelines: Will the 90-day process become a predictable review window or a bottleneck?
- Market design: Will exchanges tighten contract wording before filing to avoid public-interest fights?
Retail users should also watch costs and execution quality, not just headline contract themes. Prediction markets can feel clean because the payout is binary, but trading frictions still matter. That’s the same trap we flagged in Copy Trading Fees Hide the Real Cost of Free Trades: the visible trade is only part of the economic exposure.
The proposal is an early attempt to decide whether prediction markets become a regulated U.S. financial product, a narrowly fenced venue for certain event contracts, or a recurring legal fight between platforms and regulators. The next tell will be the comment file: if exchanges, sports leagues, academics, consumer advocates and political groups push in different directions, the final rule may reveal just how much ambiguity the CFTC is willing to keep.
Disclaimer: This XOOMAR analysis is for informational and educational purposes only. It is not financial, investment, legal, tax, or professional advice. It does not provide buy, sell, hold, price-target, portfolio, or personalized recommendations. Verify information independently and consult qualified professionals before making decisions.
Impact Analysis
- The CFTC proposal could define how prediction markets involving politics, sports and public events are reviewed in the U.S.
- Operators such as Kalshi, Polymarket and Crypto.com may face clearer rules but also more scrutiny, delays or blocked contracts.
- The rulemaking could shape the boundary between legitimate financial markets and gambling-like event contracts.
Originally published on XOOMAR. For more news and analysis, visit XOOMAR.
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