The CFTC filed an amicus brief in the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court reasserting its exclusive federal jurisdiction over prediction markets. This signals an escalating federal-state conflict that directly affects CFTC-regulated exchanges and their compliance operations.
The CFTC just drew another line in the sand. On April 24, 2026, the Commission filed an amicus brief in the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, reasserting its exclusive federal jurisdiction over prediction markets. If you operate a CFTC-regulated exchange or clear prediction market contracts, this filing matters.
The CFTC's filing represents another chapter in an ongoing jurisdictional dispute between federal regulators and state authorities. Massachusetts has apparently pursued enforcement actions against CFTC-regulated prediction market exchanges. The Commission is pushing back hard.
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CFTC Chairman Michael S. Selig did not mince words: "Some states continue to pursue ever-escalating, illegal enforcement actions against CFTC-regulated exchanges, despite rulings from multiple courts halting those efforts. Congress has entrusted the CFTC with the sole authority to regulate commodity derivatives markets, including prediction markets."
He added a direct warning: "To any state that seeks to nullify federal law and seize authority over these markets, I say again: we will see you in court."
This is textbook preemption doctrine. Under the Commodity Exchange Act, the CFTC holds exclusive jurisdiction over commodity derivatives markets. Prediction markets, which allow participants to trade contracts based on event outcomes, fall squarely within this framework when structured as derivatives.
The Commission's position is straightforward:
Multiple courts have already ruled in the CFTC's favor on this question. The Massachusetts filing signals the Commission will continue defending its turf.
If you're a designated contract market or swap execution facility listing prediction market products, you're caught in the crossfire. State attorneys general may continue pursuing enforcement actions regardless of federal preemption arguments. That means potential state-level litigation, subpoenas, and regulatory pressure, even if you're operating fully within CFTC rules.
Compliance teams need to track this conflict closely. Document your federal registration status. Maintain clear records showing CFTC oversight of your prediction market offerings. If you receive state-level inquiries, involve counsel immediately.
Three concrete steps:
This jurisdictional fight isn't over. The CFTC has made its position unmistakably clear, but states continue testing those boundaries. Build your compliance posture accordingly.
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No. This filing doesn't create new rules -- it's the CFTC asserting existing federal authority. Your compliance obligations remain governed by the Commodity Exchange Act and applicable CFTC regulations. The filing may, however, affect how you respond to state-level enforcement inquiries.
Technically, yes -- states can file enforcement actions. However, the CFTC's position is that federal law preempts such actions, and multiple courts have agreed. If you face state enforcement, the federal preemption defense is your primary tool, but you'll need counsel to assert it properly.
Do not ignore them. Acknowledge receipt, involve outside counsel immediately, and prepare your federal registration documentation. Your response should clearly establish that you operate under CFTC jurisdiction while preserving all legal defenses. Document everything.
The content in this blog is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice, regulatory guidance, or an offer to sell or solicit securities. GiGCXOs is not a law firm. Compliance program requirements vary based on business model, customer base, and regulatory classification.
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