Connect with us
DAPA Banner

Crypto World

Washington sues Kalshi as states ramp up legal pressure against prediction markets

Published

on

The state of Washington has become the latest to sue a prediction markets provider, after alleging Friday that Kalshi had violated state gambling laws through its products.

According to the complaint, Washington has a tightly-regulated gambling market, including a ban on online gambling, but Kalshi’s products bypass these regulations.

“Kalshi’s website and app show consumers a range of events that they can bet on and the odds for those various events, which dictate how much the bettor will be paid out if the event occurs,” a press release from the state said. “This is exactly how sportsbooks and other gambling operations function. Kalshi advertises that they allow consumers to ‘bet on anything’ by simply calling their service a ‘prediction market’ rather than ‘gambling.’”

The lawsuit said Kalshi’s advertisements referred to “legal betting,” and alleged the company’s activities met state definitions of “gambling,” “professional gambling,” “bookmaking” and other key state provisions. It also included a provision alleging that Kalshi’s products promoted gambling addiction and targeted college students in particular.

Advertisement

Kalshi filed to move the case to federal court, saying it was already litigating these issues in other federal courts and that it received “no warning or dialogue” from Washington prior to the lawsuit.

Washington’s filing continues a growing state backlash against prediction market providers. Prediction market providers and their proponents, including Commodity Futures Trading Commission Chair Mike Selig, argue that these companies offer derivatives contracts that are appropriately regulated at the federal level. States have argued that these companies are offering gambling products dressed up as something else and should be subject to state gambling laws as a result.

While both prediction market providers and states have had some initial legal victories, this argument is likely to wind up before the U.S. Supreme Court, legal experts have told CoinDesk.

Nevada actions

The suit came a week after Nevada won an appeals court victory allowing it to file for a temporary restraining order against Kalshi, forcing the company to remove its sports, entertainment and election contracts from the state for at least two weeks. A hearing will be held at the end of those two weeks on Friday, April 3, at which a state judge will decide whether to extend the restriction.

Advertisement

Trade publication Gambling Insider reported on Friday that Kalshi’s Nevada users were still able to use the platform after the temporary restraining order went into effect.

Nevada also secured a preliminary injunction against Coinbase, requiring it to continue a pause in its prediction market offerings in the state in an order dated Thursday, March 26, following an initial temporary restraining order issued in early February.

Under Thursday’s order, Nevada District Judge for the First Judicial District Court Kristin Luis wrote that Coinbase did not dispute it offered “‘event-based contracts’ that relate to sporting and other events, including college basketball games, college and professional football games and elections,” which meet the definition of “sports pools” defined under Nevada law.

Coinbase is partnered with Kalshi, the judge noted. Like the Kalshi order, this one is ordering Coinbase not to offer sports, election or entertainment contracts in Nevada, at least until a broader court case is resolved.

Advertisement

The judge gave Coinbase 60 days to “make technological enhancements” to comply with the order.

Nevada and Washington’s federal district courts are both part of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals.

Read more: Kalshi secures license to offer margin trading to institutional investors

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Click to comment

You must be logged in to post a comment Login

Leave a Reply

Crypto World

Polymarket Looks to Raise $400M at $15B valuation: Report

Published

on

Polymarket Looks to Raise $400M at $15B valuation: Report

Prediction market platform Polymarket is reportedly in talks with investors to raise another $400 million in fresh capital, The Information reported Monday.

The $400 million raise would be made at a $15 billion valuation, The Information said, citing two people familiar with the matter. 

The raise would add to a wave of institutional capital flowing into the predictions market space in recent months. New York Stock Exchange parent Intercontinental Exchange (ICE) invested $600 million into Polymarket in late March, while competitor platform Kalshi’s valuation was marked at about $22 billion in its last funding round.

The Information said Polymarket is looking to add strategic investors beyond ICE in its next funding round, which could total $1 billion.

Advertisement

Prediction markets started booming around the time of the 2024 US election and are now consistently recording over $10 billion in monthly trading volume across markets covering everything from sports and political elections to financial results and cultural events.

Monthly trading volume for Kalshi and Polymarket since May 2025. Source: Token Terminal

With that rise has come surging institutional interest from some of Wall Street’s biggest players.

In early March, one of Nasdaq’s options exchanges, Nasdaq MRX, filed to offer cash-settled, binary-style contracts on the Nasdaq-100 index.

Cboe Global Markets is also launching a prediction market-style offering, while CME Group partnered with American gambling company FanDuel, which will enable traders to bet on markets outside of finance. 

Related: Kalshi to create ‘portal for parents‘ on prediction markets: Report

Advertisement

Last week, TradFi firms Charles Schwab and Citadel Securities said they are also weighing a move into prediction markets.

Legal issues linger over prediction markets

Despite the rise in prediction market activity, Kalshi and others have faced regulatory scrutiny over widespread insider trading and market manipulation allegations.

Kalshi is currently engaged in a court battle with the Nevada Gaming Control Board after a lower court temporarily blocked Kalshi from operating in the state. 

The state regulator argues that Kalshi’s contracts facilitate unlicensed gambling. Coinbase chief legal officer Paul Grewal has predicted that the case could reach the US Supreme Court, potentially creating precedent over the regulatory treatment of prediction markets and event-based derivatives.

Advertisement

Magazine: Should users be allowed to bet on war and death in prediction markets?