• Loading stock data...
Thursday, January 15, 2026

Sports Betting in Flux As Gambling Giants Enter Prediction Markets

FanDuel and DraftKings left the American Gaming Association this week amid a difference of opinion on prediction markets.

DraftKings
Imagn Images

The U.S. sports betting industry is at a crossroads. 

The country’s two biggest sportsbooks, FanDuel and DraftKings, are charting a separate path from the American Gaming Association—one of the most prominent industry advocacy groups—even as both sides continue to push for legalized, regulated sports betting nationwide.

DraftKings and FanDuel left the AGA—just like they recently withdrew from Las Vegas—after it became clear that their entry into prediction markets put them at odds. Both sports betting giants will launch prediction-markets platforms soon; FanDuel said its app will come online in December, while DraftKings said its own platform will be available “in the coming months.

On Tuesday, the AGA accepted requests from DraftKings and FanDuel to “relinquish their membership, effective immediately,” an AGA spokesperson said in a statement. 

“We wish them the best, and we expect to maintain close ties in our mission to promote and protect legal, regulated gaming,” the AGA spokesperson said.

Representatives for both FanDuel and DraftKings confirmed the companies decided to split from the AGA.

The AGA—and a growing number of state regulators—have raised concerns that prediction markets circumvent established gambling laws, exposing consumers to products that fall outside the traditional regulatory framework. The advocacy group says on its website that prediction markets “openly flout sports betting’s state and tribal oversight in offering sports event contracts.”

Despite the separation, the two sides still have common ground in that they ultimately want sports betting legalized and regulated across the country. Both DraftKings and FanDuel will launch sports event contracts in states where online sports betting is not legal. FanDuel specified that these contracts will only be available in such states, and that when a new state legalizes online sports betting, the contracts will no longer be available there.

The move comes amid an eruption in prediction markets, a sector that has sparked both interest and legal controversy. Platforms like Kalshi, Robinhood, and Crypto.com are navigating court challenges in multiple states, while Polymarket recently cleared regulatory hurdles and is relaunching in the U.S. after having been barred for three years under the prior administration.

What’s the Difference?

The legal battle centers on whether there is any distinction between traditional sports betting and sports event contracts. Traditional sports betting is regulated on a state-by-state basis in the U.S., while prediction-markets platforms like Kalshi have been offering sports event contracts in all 50 states. Currently, 38 states and Washington, D.C., allow some form of online betting (Missouri is set to become the 39th state on Dec. 1).

Nigel Eccles, who cofounded FanDuel in 2009, recognizes that on the surface it’s hard to tell the difference between sports betting and trading on event contracts. 

“A bet on the Giants feels like a bet on the Giants,” he tells Front Office Sports

The distinction lies in the details. With sportsbooks, users bet against the house, which profits when players lose. Prediction markets operate as peer-to-peer exchanges where participants bet against one another, prices adjust dynamically, and the platform makes money through fees. 

“There’s a difference, even though at the core it looks similar,” says Eccles, who now runs BetDEX Labs, a betting exchange based in Scotland, as well as BetHog, a crypto-based company out of Belize that offers online casino games.

Kalshi and Polymarket, viewed as the two primary platforms, have each ballooned in value recently. Both companies raised money over the summer—Kalshi landed $300 million at a $5 billion valuation, and even more recently raised $1 billion at an $11 billion valuation, according to TechCrunch. Polymarket, meanwhile, reached a deal for the operator of the New York Stock Exchange to invest up to $2 billion at an $8 billion valuation. Both have reportedly received recent takeover interest.

They may be considered the incumbents, but the market is getting crowded. President Donald Trump’s Truth Social platform is getting in on the game through an “exclusive” agreement with Crypto.com, and other players include PrizePicks, Underdog, and Novig. Fanatics is also plotting a prediction-markets platform, and Coinbase is reportedly working on a prediction-markets platform that will be powered by Kalshi.

“This market has exploded so quickly, 12 months ago it barely existed,” JB Mackenzie, VP and GM of futures and international at Robinhood, recently told FOS.

A Friendlier Administration

The explosion comes during a presidential administration that has been more favorable to prediction markets than its predecessor. The CFTC had opposed prediction markets under the Biden Administration.

Mike Selig, Trump’s new nominee to chair the Commodity Futures Trading Commission—the federal regulator charged with policing event contracts—continuously deferred to the courts when asked about sports event contracts by a panel of lawmakers Wednesday. On Thursday, the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry voted to advance his nomination. The vote was along party lines, with 12 Republicans voting yes and 11 Democrats voting no. His nomination now moves to the full Senate. It is not clear when that vote will take place. 

It’s been a frenetic few months in the world of prediction markets. How will this all shake out? Depending on who you ask, you get a different answer.

Gaming law and sports betting attorney Daniel Wallach has been critical of the CFTC taking no action and effectively allowing prediction-markets platforms to self-certify event contracts—an approach that platforms then cite as evidence that they have federal oversight. He has called this a “regulatory capture.” He and other legal experts think this issue could wind up in front of the U.S. Supreme Court; Andrew Kim, a litigator at Goodwin Procter, recently pointed out on social media that Kalshi, Crypto.com, and Nevada’s gaming regulator have all hired “experienced Supreme Court counsel as their outside counsel.”

Greg Bettinelli, a partner at The Chernin Group, said during last month’s inaugural FOS Asset Class summit in New York that while it’s still the “early innings” in prediction markets, he doesn’t think consumers overwhelmingly want the product.

“I think the owners of prediction markets want prediction markets,” he said. “It’s an overly complex product for the everyday sports fan and bettor.”

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Nov 22, 2025; San Jose, California, USA; Washington Spirit forward Trinity Rodman (2) looks to pass against Gotham FC during the second half at PayPal Park.

NWSL Union Files Grievance Over League’s ‘Rodman Rule’ for Star Players

The NWSLPA says the league “never negotiated” the workaround with the union.
Rich Paul

Rich Paul Pitches NBA Trades on Podcast: ‘Insane and Fucked Up’

Paul proposed trading Austin Reaves on his podcast. 
Ole Miss running back Kewan Lacy (5) scores a touchdown during the CFP Fiesta Bowl against Miami at the State Farm Stadium, in Glendale, Ariz., on Thursday, Jan. 8, 2026.

College Football Transfers Down 23% After Schools Started Paying Players

Ohio State had 33 players on its football roster enter the portal this month.

Unrivaled Faces Stiff Challenges As Ratings Plunge to Start Year 2

Ratings are significantly down from the league’s first year.

Featured Today

Black Rabbit

The Netflix Star Who Makes Sure NBA Players Have Clean Towels

How a Nets staffer landed a breakout role on “Black Rabbit.”
January 9, 2026

NHL Ditched Its Dress Code. Hockey’s Fashion Era Arrived Quickly

With no dress code, impeccably dressed players are seeing big-money deals.
January 6, 2026

Hockey in Florida Was Once a Risk. Now It’s Thriving

The state of Florida has become a traditional—and highly lucrative—market.
Dec 30, 2025; Los Angeles, California, USA; Los Angeles Lakers guard Luka Doncic (77) reacts after scoring a basket against the Detroit Pistons during the second half at Crypto.com Arena
January 4, 2026

Why Pro Sports Team Valuations Will Keep Climbing in 2026

Asset scarcity and increasing media-rights deals underpin soaring valuations.
Sep 26, 2025; Bethpage, New York, USA; Team USA golfer Bryson DeChambeau plays his shot from the first tee on the first day of competition for the Ryder Cup at Bethpage Black.
exclusive

Kalshi Tees Up First Athlete Deal With Bryson DeChambeau

The prediction-market platform previously made a deal with the NHL’s Blackhawks.
December 30, 2025

ESPN Employee Didn’t Violate Rules in $1 Million DraftKings Win

ESPN researcher Mackenzie Kraemer didn’t break company rules, a source told FOS.
Prediction markets
December 31, 2025

Prediction Markets Exploded in 2025. What Comes Next?

After 2025’s prediction-markets mania, the dust may start to settle in 2026.
Sponsored

ESPN Edge Innovation Conference 2025: Inside the Technology Shaping the Future of..

At ESPN Edge Innovation Conference 2025, ESPN showcased how AI, immersive tech, and a rebuilt direct-to-consumer platform are redefining the future of sports media.
December 30, 2025

Sportsbooks Sue to Stop Chicago’s New Licensing Requirement

DraftKings, FanDuel, and others are crying foul over last-minute budget additions.
December 30, 2025

Why Polymarket Has Avoided Legal Pushback So Far

Regulators have taken a wait-and-see approach since Polymarket’s U.S. relaunch.
Emmanuel Clase
December 26, 2025

2025 Was the Year of Sports Gambling Scandals

Gambling scandals across pro and college sports went mainstream in 2025.
Dec 20, 2025; Ottawa, Ontario, CAN; Chicago Blackhawks left wing Andre Burakovsky (28) celebrates with center Ryan Greene (20) his goal scored in the second period against the Ottawa Senators at the Canadian Tire Centre.
exclusive
December 23, 2025

Blackhawks Are First Pro Team to Make Direct Deal With Kalshi

The deal builds on Kalshi’s existing partnership with the NHL.