Key Takeaways:
Polymarket is returning to the United States this time with full federal supervision. The new, amended title granted by the CFTC will provide the crypto-native prediction market with a regulated entry point into the mainstream American trading system, which is likely to be one of the largest compliance achievements the industry has had so far.
The Amended Order of Designation formally authorized Polymarket to operate as a U.S.-regulated venue that provides the facility of intermediated access. This implíe that the American traders will not require workarounds or offshore access to engage in event contracts. Rather, they will be able to trade with registered futures commission merchants (FCMs) and traditional brokerage facilities, which are the same infrastructure that is already deployed in commodities, derivatives, and other federally regulated instruments.
That puts Polymarket on the line with established exchanges in the U.S. that have to fulfill strict criteria, such as:
The new structure is a major change in the previous operations of Polymarket. In 2022, the company banned U.S. users at the pressure of the regulators. It is now coming back with the express permission of the CFTC and a compliance system that has been designed to withstand the scrutiny of the oversight agencies in the United States.
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The granting is an indicator that event-based markets are, finally, a gray area in terms of regulation. Although prediction markets were adopted by global crypto users over the years, U.S. authorities remained wary of it, until recently. The recognition of CFTC places Polymarket at the same level as other approved contract markets. Consequently, the platform can now:
Historically, the crypto prediction markets were functioning on the fringes of the financial system. Polymarket will be among the first crypto-native market structures to connect the decentralized market design to the highly regulated derivatives market structure in the U.S. under the supervision of CFTC. This transition could:
Its regulatory advances to 2025 came after a series of structural steps that it initiated in the first half of the year such as the acquisition of regulated derivatives exchange and clearinghouse. This provided Polymarket the framework necessary to comply with the standards of the CFTC regarding custody, reporting, and supervising of order books.
The contract-market listing on the platform was formalized under the designated entity QCX LLC (operating as Polymarket US), mid-2025, preparing the way to the approval of this week.
Polymarket has multiple times indicated that it plans to resume operations in the U.S., and currently, the plans are aligned with federal regulation as opposed to operating within regulatory limits.
Granting of approval has been obtained and Polymarket is about to roll out intermediated. With compliance pipelines in place, industry observers anticipate the U.S brokers and FCMs to start incorporating access. The potential short term developments include:
This change puts more pressure on other event-trading platforms as well. As soon as one of the controlled actors takes a market share with the help of mainstream brokers, competitive platforms might have to follow their example and develop similar compliance frameworks.
Regulatory approval, however, is associated with great expectations. Polymarket should have strict discipline in reporting and comply with the regulations of derivatives-market integrity and work under a permanent control of CFTC.
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The post Polymarket Wins Landmark CFTC Approval, Clearing the Way to Launch Regulated US Prediction Markets appeared first on CryptoNinjas.


