The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC)has issued a no-action position covering swap data reporting and recordkeeping requirements for fully collateralized event contracts.
This gives prediction markets and the platforms that list them temporary relief from certain reporting rules.
Under the no-action letter, the divisions will not recommend that the Commission take enforcement action against designated contract markets, derivatives clearing organizations, or their participants for failing to comply with certain swap-related recordkeeping rules.
The position also covers the obligation to report event contract data to swap data repositories. The relief applies only to fully collateralized event contract transactions and is subject to the terms set out in the letter.
The CFTC’s no-action position addresses a long-running tension between how event contracts are written and how the agency’s existing swap rules were designed to operate.
Event contracts pay out based on outcomes such as election results, economic indicators, sports results, and policy decisions.
CFTC’s no-action letter announcement on X
The contracts can technically be classified as swaps under the Commodity Exchange Act, which would trigger a set of data reporting requirements built around traditional commodity and financial futures.
The new letter sets those reporting requirements aside for fully collateralized event contracts. The relief covers all beneficiaries of previous no-action letters that addressed data reporting for similar contracts.
Entities looking to list or clear similar products may now request a no-action position identical to the new letter, with successful applicants added to an appendix attached to the original document.
The agency called the move as a way to remove the need for staff to issue repeated identical letters every time a new platform applies for similar relief.
A no-action letter from CFTC staff is not a formal rule change. It is guidance stating that, under specific conditions, the divisions will not recommend an enforcement action even if a regulatory requirement is technically not met in full.
The new position sits in clear contrast to the CFTC approach toward event contracts seen in earlier years.
The agency historically took a much more restrictive line, treating many event contracts as potentially in conflict with Commodity Exchange Act provisions on gaming, unlawful gambling, and contracts contrary to public interest.
PredictIt operated for years under a narrow no-action letter that capped the number of traders per market, capped investment amounts, and limited the scope of markets the platform could offer.
Snippet from CFTC’s press release
The model fit the earlier regulatory view that event-based markets could be tolerated in small experimental settings but should not be broadly commercialized.
The agency also took direct enforcement actions against unregistered event contract venues. In 2022, the CFTC fined Polymarket and ordered the platform to stop offering unregistered event contracts to United States users.
The message at the time was that event contracts were still derivatives, that exchanges had to register properly, and that crypto-based prediction markets were not outside the agency’s jurisdiction.
Election contracts received particular scrutiny under the Biden-era commission leadership. The new no-action position arrives after several court losses and a sustained legal push from operators in the space.
Kalshi won several legal battles challenging the CFTC’s earlier attempts to block political event contracts.
Courts began to question whether the agency had clear statutory authority to bar all such contracts categorically, which weakened the legal basis for the previous enforcement-heavy stance.
The market’s growth also forced a change in approach. Kalshi pushed event contracts into the mainstream through a registered derivatives exchange model.
Crypto-based prediction markets, including Polymarket, gained popularity with retail users in the United States and across global markets. Election and sports-event markets drew large trading volumes and political attention throughout the 2024 cycle and into 2025.
The combination of legal setbacks and rising user activity pushed the agency from asking whether it could stop the products to asking how to supervise them safely.
Recent CFTC guidance on sports and event contracts has put more weight on reporting standards, manipulation prevention, and coordination with leagues and exchanges than on outright prohibition.
The new no-action letter fits this newer approach. The relief is narrow in scope, covering fully collateralized contracts and specific reporting items rather than the full regulatory perimeter around event contracts.
The agency retains the ability to revisit the position, to add or remove beneficiaries, and to issue full rules at a later stage.
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