Washington is trying to yank prediction markets out of the “sports betting” box and into the “derivatives” rulebook. The Trump administration, acting through the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, filed lawsuits against three states to stop their gambling regulators from policing platforms like Kalshi and Polymarket. If the federal government wins, state gaming commissions could be sidelined in a fast-growing corner of finance-adjacent wagering where billions of dollars change hands each week.
The legal fight turns on classification. Illinois, Connecticut, and Arizona argue these apps function as unlicensed gambling sites that dodge state rules and gaming taxes, while the administration says they are “swaps,” a type of derivatives contract that sits squarely under federal jurisdiction. The CFTC’s complaints ask judges to declare states have no authority here, essentially forcing courts to answer the question that haunts the whole sector: is this finance, or is it gambling? Experts quoted in the report say the suits are an escalation that could push the issue toward the Supreme Court, and the central question will be definition, not technology.
That leaves a messy set of consequences no matter which side wins. State regulators say prediction markets undercut licensed sportsbooks that pay taxes and follow state-by-state compliance regimes; Arizona has already taken a harder line, including filing criminal charges against Kalshi. Federalizing oversight could give platforms clearer runway to expand across the country, but it also raises the bar for the CFTC to show it can police concerns that have followed the boom, including insider trading questions and markets tied to war and human suffering.
Pressure is building on Capitol Hill, too. After traders profited on markets tied to military actions, lawmakers have been pushing legislation aimed at stopping U.S. officials and service members from profiting off classified information. Meanwhile, the platforms are still chasing mainstream legitimacy through partnerships, betting that a federal “swap” label is a sturdier shield than 50 different state gambling codes. The industry’s growth is not the dispute; the fight is over who writes the rules, and that will determine whether prediction markets become a regulated financial venue or remain a legally contested form of nationwide betting.