-
Back to menu
Prices
-
Back to menu
-
Back to menu
Indices -
Back to menu
Research
-
Back to menu
Events -
Back to menu
Sponsored
-
Back to menu
Videos -
Back to menu
-
Back to menu
-
Back to menu
Webinars
Select Language
The predictions market firm had recently acquired the CFTC-regulated platform, and now the regulator has granted it certain concessions.
By Jesse Hamilton|Edited by Nikhilesh De
Updated Sep 4, 2025, 7:21 a.m. Published Sep 3, 2025, 5:07 p.m.

- The Commodity Futures Trading Commission granted a no-action letter to QCX — Polymarket’s new U.S. acquisition — over certain regulatory requirements involving events contracts.
- The CFTC has been opening its policy doors to the prediction markets, abandoning what had been a protracted legal battle over the sector’s U.S. legality.
The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission has freed up prediction market firm Polymarket’s QCX acquisition from certain disclosure and data requirements as the company moves forward in its U.S. business offerings.
QCX, which got its license to start operations in July before it was snatched up later that month by Polymarket, has been granted a “no-action letter” from the CFTC, allowing it to operate in specifically defined ways without drawing enforcement attention. The firm was acquired by Polymarket in hopes of its official return to U.S. business, which it was forced to abandon in 2022 under direction from the regulator.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW
Polymarket has since emerged from earlier federal investigative interest as the U.S. government has eased its tense relationship with this sector, and companies — also including rival Kalshi — have been given more free rein. The field, as a result, has begun to explode in visibility and usage.
Wednesday’s decision from two relevant divisions within the CFTC — at the staff level and not a commission ruling — “is similar to previous no-action positions taken with respect to reporting certain binary options transactions and similar transactions,” the agency noted. The letter doesn’t explicitly address prediction markets, but it notes its position on the “recordkeeping regulations for event contracts.”
Though he hasn’t been confirmed by the U.S. Senate, yet, President Donald Trump’s nominee to run the CFTC, former Commissioner Brian Quintenz, has close ties to Kalshi as a board member and told lawmakers that the binary event contracts offered at such firms are appropriate “hedging tools.” Even without his arrival, the agency has been taking a friendlier stance, with Acting Chairman Caroline Pham saying the CFTC has let itself get bogged down in a “sinkhole of legal uncertainty” as it pursued legal cases against the industry.
Read More: Robinhood Partners With Kalshi to Launch NFL and College Football Prediction Markets
More For You
By Jamie Crawley|Edited by Stephen Alpher
19 hours ago

Stablecoins should comply with the bloc’s regulatory standards before operating on EU soil, Lagarde argued.
What to know:
- Christine Lagarde urged EU lawmakers to impose stringent equivalence requirements and safeguards on foreign stablecoins.
- The ECB president cautioned that during a stablecoin run, investors would be more likely redeem in jurisdictions with stronger protections, such as the EU
- She emphasized the need for robust regulation to prevent arbitrage and to ensure financial stability across borders.