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The SEC may get involved as prediction market bring new contracts


SEC and CFTC face new questions as prediction markets expand

The Commodity Futures Trading Commission has been the lead regulator on event contract exchanges for over 30 years after it issued a 1992 ruling on the Iowa Electronic Markets, widely recognized as the first prediction market.   

Now, as prediction markets are booming, legal experts increasingly speculate the CFTC’s sibling agency — the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission — will have a role to play soon in this novel asset class. 

“The CFTC has come out saying that they have jurisdiction over the event contracts, but there’s also some that seem like they’re more in the SEC’s realm,” said Joe Zales, a partner at King and Spalding.

This question isn’t just a hypothetical: it’s one that the two agencies are currently sifting through. 

Last month, the SEC and CFTC issued a joint request for public comment regarding updating, clarifying and harmonizing certain definitions and issues. Included in the topics they’re reviewing are definitions related to swaps — the derivative that event contracts are classified as — along with the treatment of “novel or emerging products.”

Omar Marques | Lightrocket | Getty Images

A spokesperson for prediction market platform Polymarket confirmed to CNBC that the company has engaged with both the CFTC and SEC regarding definitional frameworks for prediction market products. Rival platform Kalshi declined to comment if it has interacted with the agencies or not on this matter. 

Some companies are already using the SEC as the launching pad for their event contracts. CBOE in a filing is seeking to operate in the SEC’s regulatory orbit for creating binary options contracts on key performance indicators for a slew of major companies. 

Jurisdictional questions existing between the SEC and CFTC aren’t new, especially when it’s about emerging asset classes. But while the two agencies have been in a similar position before, that doesn’t provide much direction on this issue. 

“This is really a jump ball,” said Jeff Le Riche, a partner at Husch Blackwell and a former chief trial attorney at the CFTC. “Nobody knows how it’s going to turn out.”

The SEC’s potential

Why the SEC may have a role in regulating prediction markets — despite not having one at the moment — is thanks to the 2010 Dodd-Frank law. The law says that while the CFTC typically regulates swaps, the SEC has jurisdiction over securities-based swaps.

Securities-based swaps are financial contracts that have ties to a singular security. If an event contract asks questions about a publicly traded company, that may look more like a securities-based swap rather than a traditional one. 

The seal of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is seen at their headquarters in Washington, D.C., U.S.

Andrew Kelly | Reuters

An easy example of this, according to legal experts, is a contract that asks traders, “Will Nvidia stock end the month up more than 5%?” That has a direct link to a publicly traded stock and the resolution of the prediction market depends on…



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