June 27, 2026
ChainGPT
Senators Demand CFTC Probe Polymarket Over Alleged Staged Trades and Misleading Promotions
U.S. senators have asked the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) to open an investigation into Polymarket after a Wall Street Journal probe raised fresh questions about how the prediction market platform marketed itself to American users.
What the senators allege
- In a letter to CFTC Chair Michael Selig, Senators Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) and John Curtis (R-Utah) say reporting suggests Polymarket used deceptive promotional tactics to reach U.S. audiences despite formally restricting domestic access.
- The WSJ report alleges Polymarket hired content creators to record trades on staged or simulated trading interfaces rather than the live platform, ran undisclosed paid influencer campaigns, and published promotional material that exaggerated potential winnings—creating a misleading impression for U.S. viewers.
What the senators want
- Schiff and Curtis asked the CFTC for a written response by July 10 confirming whether it has opened an inquiry into these advertising practices; if not, they requested an explanation for declining to investigate.
- They also asked the agency to spell out the consumer protections it expects prediction market operators to maintain, specifically requesting details on:
- advertising standards,
- age verification,
- responsible-gaming tools and addiction warnings,
- affiliate marketing practices,
- disclosure rules for influencer promotions.
Broader jurisdictional and enforcement questions
- The senators pressed the CFTC on whether it has the authority, expertise, and resources to police prediction markets in ways comparable to state and tribal gaming regulators—particularly if the agency continues to assert exclusive federal jurisdiction over such products.
- Their letter warned against federal oversight becoming a loophole that allows platforms to sidestep state or tribal gaming laws or to use misleading promotions to weaken consumer protections.
Context: an agency under pressure
- The request arrives as the CFTC is already defending its expanding role in court. This week the agency sued Kentucky after state authorities targeted prediction market operators, including Polymarket and Kalshi; the CFTC argues federal law gives it sole oversight.
- The dispute over federal vs. state control is playing out alongside broader friction over crypto-linked derivatives. CME Group recently sued the CFTC and Chair Selig after the agency approved U.S. crypto perpetual futures—contracts CME says should be treated as swaps under Dodd-Frank and which, the exchange argues, were approved without formal rulemaking. CME CEO Terrence Duffy had signaled legal action after exchanges and platforms including Kalshi and Coinbase received approvals to list such products.
Regulatory coordination effort
- Separately, the CFTC and the SEC launched a 60-day public consultation on crypto derivatives regulation, seeking input on portfolio margining and whether Dodd-Frank definitions of swaps and security-based swaps remain fit for today’s markets. SEC Chair Paul Atkins said closer agency coordination could boost market efficiency, strengthen consumer protections, and reduce overlapping regulation as crypto derivatives and tokenized products expand in the U.S.
Why it matters
- The senators’ push highlights two converging concerns for the crypto and prediction-market sectors: whether platforms are using aggressive or misleading marketing to attract U.S. users, and whether federal regulators are equipped—and willing—to enforce consumer protections at the expense of state and tribal gaming regimes. The CFTC’s response by July 10 will be closely watched by platforms, regulators, and consumer advocates alike.
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