Close Menu
  • Latest News
    • Bitcoin
    • Ethereum
    • Altcoins
    • Meme Coins
  • Tech
    • Blockchain
    • Security and Privacy
  • Web 3
    • Gaming
  • Legal
    • Legal and Regulatory
    • Adoption
  • Analysis
  • Learn
    • Education
    • Wallets and Exchanges
  • Tools
    • Market Overview
    • Exchange Tool
  • INFO@FREE.CC
What's Hot

Consensys Urges SEC to Exempt Self-Custody Wallets, Citing Regulatory Gap for 99% of Tokens

May 14, 2026

UBOX Taps ClawWorks to Accelerate Independent AI Agent Economics

May 14, 2026

Analyst Says No Reason for Bitcoin Reversal, Sees BTC Approaching Next Resistance Levels – Here Are His Targets

May 14, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Disclosure
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Free.cc (Free Cryptocurrency)Free.cc (Free Cryptocurrency)
  • Latest News
    1. Bitcoin
    2. Ethereum
    3. Altcoins
    4. Meme Coins
    5. View All

    Analyst Says No Reason for Bitcoin Reversal, Sees BTC Approaching Next Resistance Levels – Here Are His Targets

    May 14, 2026

    70% of long-term holders are in profit as the bitcoin floor hardens

    May 13, 2026

    What’s Really At Stake In The Market Structure Debate: The BRCA

    May 13, 2026

    Strategy adds 535 BTC – Still ‘buying the dip’ or something else entirely?

    May 13, 2026

    Bitcoin, Ethereum and XRP Price Analysis: What’s Coming Next?

    May 13, 2026

    Wells Fargo Boosts Ethereum ETF Holdings in Q1

    May 13, 2026

    Why Market Experts Are Still Predicting A Rise Above $10,000

    May 13, 2026

    Bitmine ETH Holdings Cross 5.2 Million—CEO Announces New Phase For Crypto Markets

    May 12, 2026

    Bitcoin Just Entered A Deceptive Territory, Here’s What You Should Know

    May 14, 2026

    XRP Ledger Hits Record High In 10K+ Wallets: Santiment

    May 13, 2026

    Mysterious Bitcoin Whale Transfers $40B After Years Of Silence

    May 13, 2026

    First Hyperliquid ETF Launch: Day One Volume Hits $1.8M–Key Details

    May 13, 2026

    Meme Coin Market Faces Imbalance as Supply Rises, Demand Falls

    April 4, 2026

    Crypto Interest Rising Toward Meme Coin Sector

    January 9, 2026

    Memes Market Cap Adds $10B in Days: Fresh Capital or Dead-Cat-Bounce?

    January 5, 2026

    Meme Coin Market Surges Past $45B as Shiba Inu, PEPE, BONK Stage 54% Price Pump

    January 4, 2026

    Consensys Urges SEC to Exempt Self-Custody Wallets, Citing Regulatory Gap for 99% of Tokens

    May 14, 2026

    UBOX Taps ClawWorks to Accelerate Independent AI Agent Economics

    May 14, 2026

    Analyst Says No Reason for Bitcoin Reversal, Sees BTC Approaching Next Resistance Levels – Here Are His Targets

    May 14, 2026

    Bitcoin Just Entered A Deceptive Territory, Here’s What You Should Know

    May 14, 2026
  • Tech
    1. Blockchain
    2. Security and Privacy
    3. View All

    UBOX Taps ClawWorks to Accelerate Independent AI Agent Economics

    May 14, 2026

    UXLINK And Origins Network Partner To Power Scalable AI-Driven Web3 Applications Using Decentralized Computing

    May 13, 2026

    WheelX.fi Expands Cross-Chain Liquidity Access Through KiteAI Integration

    May 13, 2026

    TopNod Integrates Hyperliquid – The Future of Seamless On-Chain Perpetual Trading

    May 13, 2026

    Ripple Shares DPRK Threat Data on Fraud Domains, Wallets, Campaigns

    May 5, 2026

    Digital Asset Security Moves Beyond Keys as Bitgo Adds 5-Layer Checks

    May 1, 2026

    Defillama Confirms April 2026 as Crypto’s Most-Hacked Month With 30 Incidents

    May 1, 2026

    Malicious npm Dependency Linked to AI Assisted Commit Targets Crypto W

    April 29, 2026

    Consensys Urges SEC to Exempt Self-Custody Wallets, Citing Regulatory Gap for 99% of Tokens

    May 14, 2026

    UBOX Taps ClawWorks to Accelerate Independent AI Agent Economics

    May 14, 2026

    Analyst Says No Reason for Bitcoin Reversal, Sees BTC Approaching Next Resistance Levels – Here Are His Targets

    May 14, 2026

    Bitcoin Just Entered A Deceptive Territory, Here’s What You Should Know

    May 14, 2026
  • Web 3
    1. Gaming
    2. View All

    NUMINE Joins Outer Ring MMO for the Expansion of Web3 Gaming Experiences

    May 13, 2026

    GMatrixs And MiniverseCore Join Forces To Unlock Web3 Gaming Experience With Cross-Chain DApp, DeFi Applications

    May 11, 2026

    The Identity Crisis of 2026: NFTs, AI Agents and Trust on the Agentic Web

    May 11, 2026

    DTCC’s May 2026 Tokenization Announcement Explained: What It Means for U.S. Securities and Real-World Assets

    May 11, 2026

    Consensys Urges SEC to Exempt Self-Custody Wallets, Citing Regulatory Gap for 99% of Tokens

    May 14, 2026

    UBOX Taps ClawWorks to Accelerate Independent AI Agent Economics

    May 14, 2026

    Analyst Says No Reason for Bitcoin Reversal, Sees BTC Approaching Next Resistance Levels – Here Are His Targets

    May 14, 2026

    Bitcoin Just Entered A Deceptive Territory, Here’s What You Should Know

    May 14, 2026
  • Legal
    1. Legal and Regulatory
    2. Adoption
    3. View All

    Consensys Urges SEC to Exempt Self-Custody Wallets, Citing Regulatory Gap for 99% of Tokens

    May 14, 2026

    Three men charged in US over crypto wrench attack spree

    May 13, 2026

    CLARITY Act faces 100+ amendments as bankers send 8,000 demand letters against stablecoin rewards

    May 13, 2026

    Bhutan’s GMC offers quick licenses, bank accounts to lure crypto firms

    May 13, 2026

    Tether launches decentralized local AI using Isaac Asimov’s Psychohistory straight out of Foundation

    May 11, 2026

    Has Donald Trump been a net positive for Bitcoin or created an unbreakable partisan divide?

    May 10, 2026

    BlackRock looks to sidestep Clarity yield issues, filing for two new tokenized money market funds

    May 10, 2026

    Cardano’s Charles Hoskinson says the future of crypto wallets will be inside iPhones and Androids

    May 8, 2026

    Consensys Urges SEC to Exempt Self-Custody Wallets, Citing Regulatory Gap for 99% of Tokens

    May 14, 2026

    UBOX Taps ClawWorks to Accelerate Independent AI Agent Economics

    May 14, 2026

    Analyst Says No Reason for Bitcoin Reversal, Sees BTC Approaching Next Resistance Levels – Here Are His Targets

    May 14, 2026

    Bitcoin Just Entered A Deceptive Territory, Here’s What You Should Know

    May 14, 2026
  • Analysis

    Wall Street is buying XRP while Binance traders keep betting against it

    May 13, 2026

    Is a Drop Below $1 Coming Next?

    May 13, 2026

    UB Price Breakout Enters Discovery Phase

    May 13, 2026

    Injective (INJ) Price Explodes 13% After Bullish Breakout—Is a Rally to $6 Next?

    May 13, 2026

    Bitcoin (BTC) Price Holds Strong Above $80K Despite Hot CPI Data—Is Retail Accumulation Returning?

    May 13, 2026
  • Learn
    1. Education
    2. Wallets and Exchanges
    3. View All

    What’s on the Ethereum Roadmap: Glamsterdam, Hegota and Beyond

    March 30, 2026

    What Is Bluesky? The Decentralized Social Media Rival to Elon Musk’s X

    March 27, 2026

    What Is Strategy (MSTR)? The Bitcoin Treasury Company

    February 21, 2026

    What Are Prediction Markets? How Polymarket, Kalshi and Myriad Work

    February 13, 2026

    Coinbase went down for over 5 hours after missing earnings. Bulls still see a path to $300 billion by 2030

    May 8, 2026

    Coinbase cuts 14% of staff as Armstrong ties cost reset to AI and market volatility

    May 6, 2026

    Bitcoin is still in charge

    May 3, 2026

    CLARITY Act stablecoin fight shifts from yield to who captures digital-dollar economics

    April 29, 2026

    Consensys Urges SEC to Exempt Self-Custody Wallets, Citing Regulatory Gap for 99% of Tokens

    May 14, 2026

    UBOX Taps ClawWorks to Accelerate Independent AI Agent Economics

    May 14, 2026

    Analyst Says No Reason for Bitcoin Reversal, Sees BTC Approaching Next Resistance Levels – Here Are His Targets

    May 14, 2026

    Bitcoin Just Entered A Deceptive Territory, Here’s What You Should Know

    May 14, 2026
  • Tools
    • Market Overview
    • Exchange Tool
  • INFO@FREE.CC
Free.cc (Free Cryptocurrency)Free.cc (Free Cryptocurrency)
Home»Legal and Regulatory»The bets that made crypto prediction markets popular could now be banned
Crowd entering a packed stadium beside a sports prediction kiosk highlights how booming demand for betting markets could strain and destabilize the industry
Legal and Regulatory

The bets that made crypto prediction markets popular could now be banned

March 28, 2026No Comments10 Mins Read
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Prediction markets spent years trying to present themselves as smarter, better, and more useful than straight-out gambling.

Then sports arrived and did what elections, inflation contracts, and policy wagers never quite managed: it brought scale. They turned what was essentially a niche event trading activity into a mass product, and pushed the industry into a dangerous identity crisis.

Sports made prediction markets popular, but they also made them politically vulnerable.

On March 12, the CFTC opened a formal rulemaking process for prediction markets, putting manipulation, oversight, and contract structure under the federal spotlight.

Since then, Arizona has also filed criminal charges against Kalshi, while a Nevada judge temporarily blocked the company from operating there without a state license. Massachusetts had already moved against Kalshi’s sports contracts.

Now Congress is moving, too.

A bipartisan group of senators is preparing legislation that would ban sports bets and casino-style contracts on CFTC-regulated prediction markets, arguing that they’re exploiting a legal loophole to bypass state gambling rules and cut across tribal sovereignty.

It’s now safe to say that the dispute is no longer confined to a few test cases.

The industry now faces an awkward fact. Its fastest route to growth came through contracts that look, feel, and are marketed a lot like sports bets. But, its legal defense depends on persuading courts and regulators that those same contracts belong in the world of federally supervised derivatives. The more popular sports became, the harder it became to sustain that argument.

This stopped being a niche fight between startups and gaming boards a long time ago. It’s now a national argument over whether a business that behaves like sports betting can claim the legal privileges of financial market law and bypass the state-by-state gambling system that sportsbooks have spent years and billions of dollars entering.

What began as a jurisdiction fight over who regulates these contracts is now turning into something wider and more dangerous for the industry: a fight over whether sports prediction markets should exist in this form at all.

The whole fight turns on one question: bet or swap?

When you strip the dispute down to its core, you get to the main question all current and future regulation efforts are attempting to answer: Are prediction markets bets or swaps?

Linda Goldstein, a partner at CM Law, says that the answer to this question determines who regulates them. If these transactions are bets, states regulate them. If they’re swaps or derivatives, then the CFTC has the lead role, she told CryptoSlate.

States argue that the contracts may have the form of derivatives, but function as wagers in substance. This is especially true where there’s no credible commercial hedging use, and users are just staking money on the outcome of a game for a payout.

On the other hand, operators say that event contracts have long belonged inside commodities law and that a national market can’t function if every state is free to classify the same federal product as illegal gambling.

See also  Ripple added to roster of tech giants backing lobbyist push at Trump’s White House ballroom

That’s one of the many reasons this fight feels so unstable.

The consumer activity we see on prediction markets is straightforward and familiar. People put money down on uncertain outcomes and get paid if they’re right.

The main dispute here is abstract and sits one level higher, in the legal classification of the contract itself. At the center of the fight is a simple problem: the same product can be framed as a derivative by federal regulators and as gambling by the states.

We’re now seeing a battle over whether states will keep authority over activity that looks and works like gambling, or whether that authority will get absorbed into federal financial oversight. The legal dispute has gone past Kalshi or one set of contracts, and is now about who governs event-based wagering once it’s packaged as a federally supervised market product.

That turns the debate from a branding argument into a real legal conflict over who gets to regulate these markets. Once sports became the dominant use case for prediction platforms, this became a fight over whether a national sports-betting business can operate under commodities law without ever entering the state licensing systems built for sportsbooks.

That’s why states such as Utah, Arizona, and Nevada are pushing so hard. They are trying to stop gambling-like activity from migrating into a federal regime they have no control over.

Why product design matters for prediction markets

A significant part of this issue will be resolved in court. However, people underestimate the effect that product design will have on this.

One of the reasons prediction markets run into issues is when they loosen their criteria about what makes a good event contract. The hype that surrounds them makes it tempting to list fast-moving and popular events, because that’s what drives volume.

But if these products don’t have precise definitions and irrefutable settlement, they quickly turn into entertainment wagering.

This means prediction markets can start acting like sportsbooks even before regulators notice. They start drifting there when spectacle and volume outrun precision, and when contracts are built for attention first, with the settlement depending too much on interpretation.

Binary contracts look simple until users start contesting the settlement. A yes-or-no contract is only as good as the definition inside it. Once the terms that define its outcome become elastic, the market starts depending on judgment calls, arguments, and eventually litigation.

Ross Weingarten, a partner and co-chair of the Sports Integrity Group at Steptoe, said that from the consumer standpoint, prediction markets work differently from traditional sportsbooks because users are trading “yes” or “no” positions against each other, not against a house.

But when the question gets murky, or the answer is not clear, the binary question suddenly isn’t so binary.

“We saw an example of this with bets on whether Cardi B would perform at the Super Bowl. She was on stage, but didn’t have a microphone. Did she perform? The answer probably depends on which side of the bet you took. For the prediction markets, bets like this often lead to litigation.”

That’s why sports contracts vary so much in defensibility.

See also  Is It Time To Get Your XRP Off Crypto Exchanges?

Simple, hard-to-manipulate outcomes are easier to defend, which is why contracts on game winners are so popular. In-game props, performance claims, officiating-dependent outcomes, and anything vulnerable to insider knowledge or integrity distortions sit on thin ice.

It’s where the industry’s credibility will be won or lost. A platform that looks like a neutral exchange with visible order books, transparent pricing, independent settlement sources, and strong abuse detection has a stronger claim to a federal market status. A platform that looks like a bookmaker has a much weaker one.

The legal question will be resolved in court, but the legitimacy question will be resolved by the architecture of the actual product.

States started this fight, but Congress will decide where it ends

States present this as a consumer-protection and public-policy fight, and there is substance to that claim. Licensed sportsbooks sit inside a regime built around age controls, responsible-gambling funding, integrity monitoring, tax collection, and rules tailored to each jurisdiction. Prediction markets threaten to route the same activity through a federal channel that bypasses much of that system.

Goldstein is especially clear on the states’ incentives, saying it’s mostly about money and competition.

“Event contracts on sporting events account for the vast majority of transactions on prediction platforms like Kalshi and Polymarket, with some data estimating that it could be as much as 90% of the event contracts,” she explained.

“These contracts are directly competing with licensed sportsbooks. Traditional sports betting generates significant tax revenue for the states because the states receive taxes on the gross gaming revenue. The American Association of Gaming has estimated that, since the beginning of 2025, sports betting platforms have lost over $600 million to prediction markets.”

However, states are also adamant on keeping strict safeguards on all of these platforms. Goldstein explained that prediction markets circumvent many of the safeguards designed to protect consumers, such as age verifications, oversight over the integrity of the games, and mandatory contributions to gambling funds.

The American Gaming Association has made that case bluntly, accusing sports-related prediction markets of bypassing the state-based system that legal sports betting was built on. The leagues are adapting in real time as well. MLB’s deal with Polymarket and its memorandum with the CFTC on integrity cooperation amount to an acknowledgment that these markets are now too large to ignore.

The escalation in Arizona and Nevada shows how serious this has become. Arizona’s criminal case moved the dispute out of the familiar zone of cease-and-desist letters and into prosecutorial territory. Nevada’s restraining order showed that at least one court, for now, is willing to treat these products as unlicensed sports pools under state law. These are both attempts to force the industry back inside state control before federal market law hardens into a permanent workaround.

See also  Crypto Lobbyists Pitching Trump on Getting Things Done During Congress' Uncertainty

However, Weingarten explained that not all courts agree that sports event contracts amount to unlicensed sports betting subject to state law.

“Some courts have agreed; others have not,” he told CryptoSlate.

“Courts in New Jersey, California, and Tennessee have found that the contracts qualify as ‘swaps’ under the Commodity Exchange Act. But courts in Maryland, Nevada, Massachusetts, and Ohio have emphasized the historic role of states in regulating gambling. As a result, how and by whom prediction markets are regulated is very much in flux.”

That’s why the endgame probably won’t produce a clean blessing or a clean ban. CFTC has stated unequivocally that it believes it has exclusive jurisdiction over prediction markets like Kalshi and Polymarket, and states continue to claim their oversight.

But the newest turn in the story matters more than all of this, because it now widens the backlash well beyond just individual states. The bipartisan bill announced on Mar. 23 argues that sports and casino-style contracts should be carved out of federally regulated prediction markets altogether.

That’s a much more dangerous proposition for the industry because it breaks one of its core assumptions: that if prediction markets win the federal vs. state fight, sports contracts will survive them.

This changes the terrain in a much more fundamental way. The industry will no longer have to worry about whether courts will treat sports contracts as gambling under state laws, but whether Congress will decide whether they should be offered on regulated prediction markets at all.

The endgame is now a fight over categories, not just jurisdiction. States are suing, the CFTC is writing its own rules, and lawmakers have decided that some event contracts shouldn’t be allowed in the first place.

That’s why the most plausible destination we’ll get to is a hybrid regime, with tighter federal rules, more category restrictions, more surveillance demands, more pressure around contract clarity, and tougher expectations around how these products are marketed.

Platforms may still call themselves exchanges, but they’ll have to prove it in the way they design, settle, surveil, and present their contracts.

This isn’t a temporary flare-up in a niche product that will go away in the next cycle, because, like it or not, prediction markets are here to stay. We’re at the beginning of a foundational fight over where finance ends, and gambling begins, and the process could drag on for years.

Prediction markets found their mass audience by moving closer to sports betting. Now they have to answer the question that success created: can they keep that audience while persuading courts, regulators, and the public that they are still something meaningfully different?

The post The bets that made crypto prediction markets popular could now be banned appeared first on CryptoSlate.

Banned Bets Crypto markets Popular Prediction
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Consensys Urges SEC to Exempt Self-Custody Wallets, Citing Regulatory Gap for 99% of Tokens

May 14, 2026

Three men charged in US over crypto wrench attack spree

May 13, 2026

CLARITY Act faces 100+ amendments as bankers send 8,000 demand letters against stablecoin rewards

May 13, 2026

Bhutan’s GMC offers quick licenses, bank accounts to lure crypto firms

May 13, 2026
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Top Posts

SBI Group to pilot real-time tokenized deposit settlement using Partior Blockchain and DCJPY token

September 19, 2025

Bitcoin eyes $100K amid market caution – Here’s why it makes sense!

January 10, 2026

Stay ahead with the latest crypto news, market updates, blockchain insights, and trends. Your trusted source for everything happening in the digital asset world.


We're social. Connect with us:

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube
Top Insights

Consensys Urges SEC to Exempt Self-Custody Wallets, Citing Regulatory Gap for 99% of Tokens

May 14, 2026

UBOX Taps ClawWorks to Accelerate Independent AI Agent Economics

May 14, 2026

Analyst Says No Reason for Bitcoin Reversal, Sees BTC Approaching Next Resistance Levels – Here Are His Targets

May 14, 2026
Get Informed

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news From Free.cc directly in your Inbox!

  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Disclosure
© 2026 free.cc - All rights reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.