Kalshi and Polymarket have lost their bid to pause state-level gambling cases filed against them in Nevada and Washington, a ruling that keeps both prediction market platforms under immediate legal pressure as state regulators push forward with enforcement actions.
The platforms had sought to block the state proceedings while they mounted legal challenges, but courts denied those requests. The ruling means Nevada and Washington can continue pursuing their cases without delay, according to Bloomberg Law reporting on the decision.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
- Courts denied Kalshi and Polymarket’s requests to halt state gambling cases in Nevada and Washington.
- State regulators are treating prediction market contracts as gambling activity subject to state enforcement.
- The ruling is procedural, not a final verdict, but it allows state cases to move forward immediately.
A Procedural Loss With Real Consequences
This is not a final ruling on whether prediction markets constitute gambling. It is a procedural decision that denied the platforms’ attempts to stay the state-level actions. The practical effect is significant: both companies must now defend themselves in state courts while the broader legal questions remain unresolved.
The denial increases short-term legal costs and uncertainty for both Kalshi and Polymarket. It also signals that courts are not inclined to shield prediction market operators from state enforcement simply because federal regulatory questions are still being debated.
As The Block reported, the failed bids apply to both the Nevada and Washington proceedings simultaneously, compounding the legal burden on both platforms.
Why States Are Treating Prediction Markets as Gambling
At the core of these cases is a classification dispute. State gambling regulators in Nevada and Washington view certain event contracts offered by prediction market platforms as gambling products that fall under their enforcement authority.
Prediction markets allow users to wager on the outcomes of real-world events, from elections to economic indicators. State regulators argue this activity meets the legal definition of gambling under their statutes, regardless of how the platforms characterize their products at the federal level.
The jurisdictional tension is notable. While the CFTC has historically overseen certain types of event contracts, states maintain independent authority over gambling within their borders. Separately, a federal regulator has sued to block Minnesota’s ban on prediction markets, highlighting the multi-front nature of this regulatory battle.
Near-Term Implications for the Prediction Market Industry
The ruling could embolden other states to pursue similar enforcement actions. If Nevada and Washington succeed, it would establish precedent that state gambling laws apply to these platforms, potentially forcing operators to obtain state-level licenses or exit those markets entirely.
This regulatory uncertainty is not unique to prediction markets. The broader digital asset space continues to face similar jurisdictional questions, as seen in debates around the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve bill and how federal policy interacts with state-level enforcement.
For Kalshi and Polymarket, the immediate concern is operational. Defending active state cases while navigating federal regulation creates an expensive legal environment. The outcome may also affect how investors view the sector’s viability, much as funding rounds like Squid’s recent $6 million raise reflect continued investor interest in crypto infrastructure despite regulatory headwinds.
How these state cases resolve could determine whether platforms operate under a single federal framework or must comply with a patchwork of state gambling regulations. For an industry already navigating volatile markets, where tokens like NEAR Protocol swing on sentiment shifts, the added legal complexity represents a meaningful challenge to U.S.-facing prediction market business models.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.
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