US Lawmakers Move to Ban Prediction Market War Bets

US lawmakers are moving to tighten the rules around prediction markets tied to war and death, but the immediate market impact looks more nuanced than the headline alone suggests. Sen. Adam Schiff said on March 10, 2026 that he introduced the DEATH BETS Act, with Rep. Mike Levin set to introduce companion legislation in the House, to explicitly bar CFTC-registered entities from listing contracts linked to terrorism, assassination, war, or an individual’s death.

KEY TAKEAWAY

  • The DEATH BETS Act would turn an area of CFTC discretion into a direct statutory ban for listed contracts tied to war and death.
  • Congress is responding to a recent surge in controversial geopolitical event markets, including a Khamenei-related contract Schiff said reached $54 million before being paused.
  • The crypto angle is more about ecosystem liquidity than token price, because Polymarket has no native token and no direct bill-specific platform response was captured in this research set.

The bill matters because it narrows the debate from general discomfort with prediction markets to a specific proposed amendment to the Commodity Exchange Act. That makes this less about whether controversial contracts are in bad taste and more about whether Congress wants to remove regulatory ambiguity for CFTC-registered venues.

What the DEATH BETS Act Would Ban

According to Schiff’s press release, the DEATH BETS Act would explicitly prohibit any CFTC-registered entity from listing contracts involving terrorism, assassination, war, or an individual’s death. The release also says Levin will introduce companion legislation in the House, which supports the broader “lawmakers” framing in the headline rather than a Senate-only story.

The key policy shift is the move from discretion to statute. Under current Commodity Exchange Act rules, the CFTC can determine that some event contracts are contrary to the public interest, but Schiff’s office says this bill would directly amend Section 5c to bar registered entities from listing or clearing contracts tied to war or an individual’s death.

“Betting on war and death creates an environment in which insiders can profit off of classified information.”

That line from Schiff captures the core argument for the bill: lawmakers are framing these markets as a market-integrity problem, not just a political optics problem. The counterpoint is that prediction markets have long been defended as information tools, but this proposal is narrowly targeted at the most controversial contract categories rather than the whole sector.

Why Congress Is Targeting War and Death Contracts Now

The immediate catalyst appears to be the backlash around recent geopolitical markets. In the same March 10 announcement, Schiff cited a Kalshi market on whether Ali Khamenei would be “out as Supreme Leader” that reached $54 million in trading volume before it was paused.

The broader backdrop is even larger. A March 2 Blockhead report said more than $580 million traded across Kalshi and Polymarket on contracts tied to the strikes that killed Khamenei, showing how fast wartime and death-linked markets had become a real business line rather than a fringe corner of event trading.

That volume cuts both ways. Supporters of tougher rules can point to the scale as proof that the issue is no longer hypothetical, while defenders of prediction markets can argue that large participation shows demand for real-time geopolitical pricing. Congress, at least in this bill, is siding with the view that some categories should sit outside the market altogether.

Even industry voices have tried to draw lines inside the sector. Blockhead attributed this quote to Kalshi co-founder Tarek Mansour: “We don’t list markets directly tied to death.” That does not erase the political backlash, but it shows the dispute is also about where exchanges believe the boundary already is and whether lawmakers think that line needs to be codified more tightly.

MARKET CONTEXT

  • Prediction market volume across Kalshi and Polymarket reportedly reached $17 billion in January 2026, according to research cited from Benzinga.
  • Kalshi and Polymarket contracts tied to the Khamenei strikes reportedly drew more than $580 million in combined volume.
  • Crypto proxy asset UMA traded around $0.458705 at fetch time, with roughly flat 24-hour movement, suggesting limited immediate repricing.
  • The broader crypto mood was cautious, with the Fear and Greed Index at 28, labeled Fear.

What the Bill Could Mean for Kalshi, Polymarket, and Crypto Liquidity

The first practical point is what this bill does and does not measure. There is no native Polymarket token, so there is no direct token-price reaction to track, which means claims about immediate crypto market fallout should be treated cautiously.

The cleaner way to think about the crypto angle is through liquidity, infrastructure, and adjacent market sentiment. If tighter rules reduce the menu of high-volume geopolitical contracts, they could dent activity in the broader prediction-market ecosystem, especially after the category helped drive headline trading numbers earlier this year.

At the same time, the early proxy signals look restrained rather than panicked. The research brief’s CoinGecko snapshot showed UMA, often treated as a proxy for Polymarket-adjacent infrastructure, trading near $0.458705 with little 24-hour change, which fits the view that the bill adds regulatory overhang without triggering a broad crypto selloff on its own.

That distinction matters for Coinwy readers following regulation across digital markets. In another recent policy-focused piece, CFTC No-Action Letter and Phantom Wallet: What the Filing Actually Covers, the main editorial challenge was separating narrow legal text from broader crypto interpretation. The same discipline applies here: the verified story is an attempt to ban specific listed war and death contracts, not proof of an immediate crackdown on every prediction market model.

Balanced Outlook for Prediction Markets

The bull case for the sector is that a narrower rulebook could eventually reduce political risk by forcing platforms and regulators to define clearer boundaries. If the most controversial products are stripped out, prediction markets may have a stronger argument that the remaining contracts serve legitimate hedging or information-discovery functions.

The bear case is that liquidity often clusters around the most dramatic, headline-driven markets. If lawmakers succeed in banning war- and death-linked contracts at registered venues, some of the fastest-growing volume pockets could disappear, and that would matter in an ecosystem where big participation numbers have been part of the growth narrative.

There is also a split between regulated and crypto-native venues. Kalshi operates inside the CFTC framework the bill directly targets, while Polymarket’s relevance is more indirect in this specific text. For that reason, readers should be careful not to overstate one bill into a complete verdict on every market design in the space.

A similar pattern is visible across adjacent digital-asset infrastructure stories, where legal precision often matters more than the first round of headlines suggests. Coverage of institutional rails such as Moody’s Launches Onchain Credit Ratings via Canton Network and banking-linked tokenization moves like VersaBank Adds FX to Tokenized Deposits for Cross-Border Payments has shown that the strongest analysis comes from reading the operating constraints, not just the launch narrative.

For now, the most defensible conclusion is narrow. US lawmakers have introduced a bill aimed at explicit bans on listed war and death contracts, and the legislative push follows a period when those markets drew both major volume and major backlash. Whether that becomes a contained clean-up of an ethically fraught niche or a broader liquidity headwind for the prediction-market ecosystem depends on how far the bill advances and how platforms adapt.

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.

Share This Article
Thiago Alvarez is a crypto and fintech analyst at Coinwy, covering blockchain payments, DeFi protocols, and digital asset regulation. With a background in financial technology and compliance analysis, Thiago focuses on evaluating the operational viability and regulatory positioning of emerging crypto projects. His work examines token economics, cross-border payment infrastructure, and institutional adoption trends across global markets.
Exit mobile version