Saturday, July 4, 2026

Sportsbooks Call for Tighter Regulations on Prediction Markets

“If it looks like a duck and quacks like a duck, I say it should be regulated like a duck,” one gambling CEO says.

Andy Reid
Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

A decade ago, before the Supreme Court overturned the federal ban on sports betting, DraftKings and FanDuel turned “fantasy sports” into a multi-billion-dollar industry. All the while, the gaming industry complained in chorus: How is this not gambling?

Now that same industry is giving prediction markets like Kalshi and Crypto.com side-eye as they wander onto its turf.

“There are moves into our sector,” BetMGM CEO Adam Greenblatt told Front Office Sports in an interview at the Super Bowl on Friday. “You’ve seen CFTC are trying to offer contracts on sports wagering. On the gaming side, you’ve got the sweepstakes casinos doing their thing. If it looks like a duck and quacks like a duck, I say it should be regulated like a duck.”

Greenblatt’s comments mirror those put out on February 4 by the American Gaming Association, the trade organization for the gambling industry. The AGA’s vice president for government relations, Chris Cylke, argued that sports future contracts “appear to circumvent state regulatory frameworks.”

Cylke urged companies offering prediction markets to pause them as the CFTC takes time to review their legality, even as he touted the state frameworks followed by sportsbooks. “Failure to sustain and uphold state regulatory frameworks on sports wagering poses potential consumer risks and jeopardizes state revenues dedicated towards critical priorities, such as public education, infrastructure projects, and responsible gaming programs and problem gambling services,” he said in a statement shared with Front Office Sports.

The AGA’s statement coincided with a February 4 Bloomberg report that the CFTC had asked Kalshi and Crypto.com to justify how their Super Bowl prediction markets complied with existing regulations.

That doesn’t mean a crackdown on prediction markets is imminent. 

In fact, the opposite may be true. In a February 5 press release announcing a roundtable on prediction market regulations, acting CFTC chairman Caroline Pham—elevated by President Donald Trump on his first day back in office—blasted the agency’s existing stance on event contracts as a “sinkhole of legal uncertainty” while hailing prediction markets as “an important new frontier.” 

Much of that uncertainty stems from the fact that sports betting and prediction markets have the same basic elements—money and speculation—but different regulatory systems. The Supreme Court’s 2019 decision essentially kicked sports betting laws down to the state level. Thirty-eight states now allow it.

However, event contracts stem from the Wall Street world of futures trading. They are “yes” or “no” contracts predicting the outcome of a future event and are therefore regulated at the federal level by the CFTC. 

That agency has long prohibited certain types of contracts, including those predicting election outcomes or assassinations—and gaming.

But in the past year, cracks have formed in that prohibition, paving the way for prediction markets to edge into sports betting and find a backdoor to nationwide legal status as sportsbooks fight for state-by-state approval.

In 2024, Kalshi successfully sued the CFTC to overturn its restriction on election betting. (Polymarket, which was already offering election markets at the time, barred U.S. users so as not to run afoul of the agency.)

After the election, the shift from a Biden administration keen on consumer protection to a Trump administration bent on deregulation (including an actual push to abolish the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau) meant that sports contracts might be coming.

As if on cue, in December cryptocurrency exchange Crypto.com began offering a Super Bowl prediction market. It was quick to point out that its “sports event trading” was “not ‘sports betting.’” After the CFTC asked Crypto.com in mid-January to pause the market so the agency could determine its legality, the exchange said no. With then-chair Rostin Behnam set to step down, it instead chose to run out the clock and wait for a new chair. 

Kalshi followed suit in January with its own Super Bowl event contracts—but it waited until after Inauguration Day. Robinhood, meanwhile, rolled out sports event contracts in partnership with Kalshi in early February, only to suspend it later that week after a CFTC request. 

As of Super Bowl Sunday morning, Kalshi had just over $6.16 million in trading volume, while Polymarket, which purports to prohibit U.S. traders, had registered $5.08 million. While that pales in comparison with the projected $1.5 billion betting handle Legal Sports Report is projecting for the big game, it could still grow into a credible threat, especially in jurisdictions where sportsbooks are not allowed to operate.

And some, like BetMGM, may be interested in getting in on the action. When asked about prediction markets during a February 4 earnings call, Greenblatt identified them as a growth opportunity while noting that BetMGM already has election event contracts in Ontario, where it is legal.

The former fantasy sites are also taking an interest in this new set of disruptors.

DraftKings CEO Jason Robins told FOS on Friday at the Super Bowl that his company is monitoring prediction markets’ emergence. “We’re obviously paying close attention to it and waiting to see what the outcomes of some of these different things are,” he said. “But it’s certainly an intriguing development. And anytime you see disruption like that, it’s going to cause some things to happen. How it all shakes out, I don’t know. I mean, really hard to predict.”

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Sign up for
The Memo Newsletter

Get the biggest stories and best analysis on the business of sports delivered to your inbox twice every weekday and twice on weekends.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Matt Miller ESPN

ESPN’s Matt Miller’s Crash, Backlash, and Investigation: Timeline

The Missouri AG’s office confirmed it is investigating Miller.
Jun 30, 2026; London, United Kingdom; Serena Williams of the United States returns a shot during her match against Maya Joint of Australia on day two at All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club. Mandatory Credit: Susan Mullane-Imagn Images

Serena Singles Return Draws Record Wimbledon Ratings for ESPN

Williams’s status for doubles remains in question.
Feb 1, 2026; New York, New York, USA; Los Angeles Lakers forward LeBron James (23) drives to the basket against New York Knicks guards Jalen Brunson (11) and Landry Shamet (44) during the third quarter at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images

Rich Paul: LeBron Would Have Joined Knicks If Not for Title Win

Paul revealed the Knicks have checked in on James’s free agency.
Aug 23, 2025; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; A general view of the MLB logo before the start of a game between the Cincinnati Reds and Arizona Diamondbacks at Chase Field.

New MLBPA Proposal Focuses on Roster Management

The latest labor proposal centered on MLB’s roster management rules.
podcast thumbnail mobile
Front Office Sports Today

7/3/26 – USMNT Round of 16 Ticket Frenzy, NBA Tests New Free Throw Rule, Ovechkin Returns, Country Roads Takes Over

0:00

Featured Today

ATLANTA, GA - September 05: Georgia Lottery fireworks after the game against the Seattle Mariners at Truist Park on Friday, September 5, 2025 in Atlanta, Georgia.

Inside the Spectacle and Science of MLB Fireworks

Postgame fireworks are lighting up baseball for America250.
Kansas City Chiefs
July 1, 2026

NFL Teams Push to Turn Futbol Fans Into Football Devotees

NFL teams are courting international soccer fans during their World Cup visits.
June 26, 2026

What We Saw Traveling the U.S. for the World Cup Group Stage

The knockout stage begins Sunday.
June 26, 2026

In an Era of $1,000 Tickets, $10 Watch Parties Bring Fans Together

Stadium watch parties now rival home-game experiences.
June 25, 2026

Italian Americans Have Severe World Cup FOMO

Bars and restaurants in Boston, Philly, and beyond are missing the Azzurri.
FILE PHOTO: Signage is seen outside of the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) in Washington, D.C., U.S., August 30, 2020.

Novig Founder Isn’t Worried About Kalshi, Polymarket’s Head Start

The Novig CEO says prediction markets are a better product than traditional sportsbooks.
June 29, 2026

Malik Beasley Latest NBA Player Indicted in Federal Gambling Probe

Beasley coordinated with Ed Davis to fix games, according to the indictment.
June 30, 2026

Jordan Spieth Says Betting Is Changing Golf—and Could Affect Outcomes

The golfer suggested U.S. Open fans were betting against Wyndham Clark.
Sponsored

Josh Childress: Why Now Is the Time for NBA Expansion

Josh Childress on why he invested in the Portland Thorns, the case for NBA expansion, and donating to Stanford NIL.
Kentucky Attorney General Russell Coleman sits for an interview at his office in Frankfort, Ky., on Dec. 18, 2025.
June 23, 2026

CFTC Sues Kentucky After State Takes Aim at Kalshi, Polymarket

Kentucky is the ninth state the CFTC has sued since April.
Kalshi's logo is displayed on a smartphone placed on a reflective surface onto which a betting curve is projected in Creteil, France, on March 9, 2026, during a major scandal and a $54 million lawsuit concerning bets related to recent strikes in Iran. (Photo by Samuel Boivin/NurPhoto)NO USE FRANCE
June 19, 2026

Kalshi’s Tarek Mansour Talks Giannis, Don Jr., Supreme Court

The Kalshi cofounder discussed critics, CFTC rulemaking, and more.
Reuters FILE PHOTO: Kalshi logo appears in this illustration created on April 22, 2026.
June 17, 2026

Kalshi CEO Downplays Polymarket Rivalry

Tarek Mansour says Polymarket’s scandals risk sullying the entire industry.
In this photo illustration, a mobile device displays the Kalshi logo while a laptop displays the webpage of the prediction market platform in Copenhagen, Denmark, on February 10, 2026. (Photo by Kristian Tuxen Ladegaard Berg/NurPhoto)
June 11, 2026

CFTC’s Proposed Rules Won’t Quiet Prediction-Market Critics

Markets tied to physical altercations or referee decisions would be flagged.