The US state of Nevada has sued Kalshi after the prediction market firm misplaced its court docket problem to cease the state’s regulator from taking motion over its sports activities prediction markets.
The US Court docket of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit on Tuesday denied Kalshi’s bid to cease Nevada’s gaming regulator from taking motion on its sports activities occasion contracts, eradicating a block on the regulator launching a civil swimsuit in opposition to the corporate.
After the choice, the Nevada Gaming Management Board promptly filed a civil enforcement motion in state court docket in opposition to Kalshi, which it mentioned sought to dam the corporate “from providing unlicensed wagering in violation of Nevada regulation.”
Kalshi swiftly filed a movement to have the swimsuit heard in a federal court docket, repeating its long-held argument that it’s “topic to unique federal jurisdiction” underneath the Commodity Futures Buying and selling Fee.
The appeals court docket order and subsequent lawsuit are a blow to Kalshi in its practically year-long battle in opposition to Nevada to maintain its sports activities contracts lively within the state. The corporate and different prediction markets are dealing with a number of related lawsuits from different states.
The corporate sued the state final 12 months in March after receiving a cease-and-desist order to halt all sports-related markets inside the state, and in April, a federal court docket backed Kalshi’s bid to quickly block Nevada from taking motion amid court docket proceedings.
Kalshi didn’t instantly reply to a request for remark.
Nevada says Kalshi is flouting state regulation
In its newest lawsuit, the Nevada Gaming Management Board repeated its previous declare that Kalshi’s sports activities occasion contracts meet the necessities to be licensed underneath state regulation, as they permit “customers to wager on the outcomes of sporting occasions.”
Regardless of making wagers, sports activities betting and different gaming exercise accessible within the State of Nevada, Kalshi just isn’t licensed in Nevada and doesn’t adjust to Nevada gaming regulation,” the regulator argued.
In its federal court docket movement, Kalshi argued that such a declare means the court docket “should undertake a slender interpretation” of federal commodity alternate legal guidelines, which it asserts it’s regulated underneath by the CFTC.
CFTC chair asserts jurisdiction over prediction markets
Earlier on Tuesday, CFTC chair Mike Selig mentioned his company filed an amicus transient backing Crypto.com in an analogous lawsuit the crypto alternate had introduced in opposition to Nevada.
Crypto.com had sued Nevada’s regulators in June after equally receiving a cease-and-desist letter. It additionally appealed to the Ninth Circuit in November after dropping a federal court docket movement to dam the state from taking motion.
Associated: Crypto foyer kinds working group in search of prediction market readability
The CFTC argued in its transient to the Ninth Circuit that “States can’t invade the CFTC’s unique jurisdiction over CFTC-regulated designated contract markets by re-characterizing swaps buying and selling on DCMs as unlawful playing.”
Selig mentioned that occasion contracts “are commodity derivatives and squarely inside the CFTC’s regulatory remit,” and the company would “defend its unique jurisdiction over commodity derivatives.”
The CFTC’s push comes after Trump Media and Know-how Group mentioned in October that it was seeking to carry prediction markets to its flagship social media platform, Reality Social, by way of a partnership with Crypto.com.
Donald Trump Jr., the US president’s son, has additionally been an advisor to Kalshi since January 2025. He has additionally served as an advisor to rival Polymarket after investing within the firm in August.
AI Eye: IronClaw rivals OpenClaw, Olas launches bots for Polymarket
