What's Hot

    AI is boosting demand for high skill tech jobs while quietly killing entry-level roles

    March 7, 2026

    US lawmakers consider ban on prediction markets amid Iran bets

    March 6, 2026

    Bitcoin’s $73,000 rally faces crucial test as momentum seeks shift

    March 6, 2026
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    • Business
    • Markets
    • Get In Touch
    • Our Authors
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    Crypto News: Latest Cryptocurrency News and Analysis
    • Home
    • Business

      Fidelity Buys 7.4% Of Bitcoin Mining Company Marathon Digital Holdings

      February 11, 2021

      Twitter Reacts as Auto Driver Begins Accepting Crypto as Payment

      February 11, 2021

      HSBC Becomes Latest Bank to Suspend Payments to Crypto

      February 4, 2021

      Bitcoin Holds Support; Approaching $50K Resistance

      February 4, 2021

      Cryptocurrency Prices Today: Bitcoin Up Over $47,000, Ether Rises 3%

      February 3, 2021
    • Technology
      1. Business
      2. Insights
      3. View All

      Fidelity Buys 7.4% Of Bitcoin Mining Company Marathon Digital Holdings

      February 11, 2021

      Twitter Reacts as Auto Driver Begins Accepting Crypto as Payment

      February 11, 2021

      HSBC Becomes Latest Bank to Suspend Payments to Crypto

      February 4, 2021

      Bitcoin Holds Support; Approaching $50K Resistance

      February 4, 2021

      AI is boosting demand for high skill tech jobs while quietly killing entry-level roles

      March 7, 2026

      US lawmakers consider ban on prediction markets amid Iran bets

      March 6, 2026

      Bitcoin’s $73,000 rally faces crucial test as momentum seeks shift

      March 6, 2026

      Oil shock could send Bitcoin down 45% if price surge forces Fed to delay cuts

      March 6, 2026

      Bitcoin Climbs as Elon Musk Says Tesla ‘Likely’ to Accept it Again

      March 16, 2021

      Can Cryptocurrency Be Hacked, Stolen Or Scammed? How Can You Be Safe?

      February 11, 2021

      How Investors Can Get In On Crypto Without Actually Buying Any

      February 4, 2021

      Ethereum Just Underwent a Major Change – Hence, The 25% Jump in a Week!

      February 4, 2021
    • Insights
      1. Bitcoin
      2. Ethereum
      3. Eurozone
      4. Monero
      5. View All

      Bitcoin Hovers Around $70K as Weak Demand and Defensive Positioning Signal Fragile Market, Says Glassnode

      March 6, 2026

      Sydney-Based Iren Orders 50,000 Nvidia GPUs to Supercharge AI Data Center Expansion

      March 6, 2026

      Contractor’s Son Arrested Over Alleged $46M Crypto Theft From US Marshals

      March 6, 2026

      Trump-Linked Miner American Bitcoin Boosts Treasury to 6,500 BTC

      March 6, 2026

      AI is boosting demand for high skill tech jobs while quietly killing entry-level roles

      March 7, 2026

      US lawmakers consider ban on prediction markets amid Iran bets

      March 6, 2026

      Bitcoin’s $73,000 rally faces crucial test as momentum seeks shift

      March 6, 2026

      Oil shock could send Bitcoin down 45% if price surge forces Fed to delay cuts

      March 6, 2026

      KuCoin launches $1M futures airdrop to reward traders holding new listings

      March 5, 2026

      KuCoin launches KCS PulseDrop to turn trading and payments into rewards

      March 5, 2026

      ADA price stuck near $0.27 despite SPAR payment integration

      March 5, 2026

      OKB price skyrockets after NYSE parent company ICE invests in OKX

      March 5, 2026

      U.S. Mint Releases 2026-W Proof Gold Eagles with Dual Dates

      March 5, 2026

      Stack’s Bowers Announces 2026 Pro Numismatist Program

      March 4, 2026

      US Mint Unveils Dual-Date Enhanced Uncirculated Silver Eagle

      March 2, 2026

      2026 Proof American Silver Eagle Inventories Depleted

      March 1, 2026

      AI is boosting demand for high skill tech jobs while quietly killing entry-level roles

      March 7, 2026

      US lawmakers consider ban on prediction markets amid Iran bets

      March 6, 2026

      Bitcoin’s $73,000 rally faces crucial test as momentum seeks shift

      March 6, 2026

      Oil shock could send Bitcoin down 45% if price surge forces Fed to delay cuts

      March 6, 2026
    • Markets
    • Get In Touch
    Crypto News: Latest Cryptocurrency News and Analysis
    Home » US lawmakers consider ban on prediction markets amid Iran bets
    Ethereum

    US lawmakers consider ban on prediction markets amid Iran bets

    行政By 行政March 6, 2026No Comments7 Mins Read
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    $BANK Presale$BANK Presale

    Washington lawmakers are moving on multiple fronts to curb the most politically toxic corners of prediction markets after millions of dollars flowed into bets tied to US-linked military action in Iran.

    Over the past week, several Democratic lawmakers have been pursuing multiple paths to rein in the fast-rising business.

    One effort, led by Rep. Mike Levin and Sen. Chris Murphy,  focuses on war-related contracts that critics say should never have been listed.

    Another, spearheaded by US Senators Jeff Merkley and Amy Klobuchar, would seek to bar elected officials and senior executive branch officials from trading event contracts altogether.

    The central tensions in these efforts show that the mounting wagers tied to military action, leadership killings, and other national security events have created intolerable incentives and invite the abuse of nonpublic information.

    So, US lawmakers are making a significant effort to nip these activities in the bud and prevent widespread profiteering from these events.

    Still, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) is preparing a broader rulemaking that could preserve a legal path for many prediction markets rather than shut the sector down outright.

    How Iran war bets became the trigger

    The immediate spark was a surge in trading around the US-Israel joint military action against Iran last weekend.

    Reuters reported that $529 million was wagered on contracts tied to the timing of attacks and another $150 million on contracts linked to whether Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei would be removed from power.

    At the same time, crypto analytics firm Bubblemaps pointed out that about 10 accounts made about $1.4 million in profit on Polymarket bets funded in the hours before the strikes.

    Prediction Market Profiteering
    Insider Trading on Prediction Markets (Source: BubbleMaps)

    Those figures gave lawmakers a vivid example of the risk they have been warning about for months.

    On the social media platform X, Murphy revealed that he was working on legislation to ban these platforms after the trades raised questions about whether anyone with advance knowledge of military action had profited from it.

    He argued that such trades should not be legal and added:

    “A handful of people made big, unusual $100,000+ bets on Polymarket – that the U.S. would strike Iran the next day. The Iran War is fueling a new kind of corruption: White House officials secretly profiting off war. It’s disgusting. We need to ban it.”

    That line of attack reflects how quickly the issue has moved beyond a narrow dispute about platform rules.

    In Washington, the argument is now about whether event contracts tied to war, terrorism, assassination, or other violent outcomes are a moral hazard, a national security vulnerability, or both.

    Onshore and offshore markets diverge

    The political backlash has also highlighted the divide between regulated US venues and offshore crypto-based platforms.

    Kalshi, which operates as a CFTC-regulated exchange, has said it bans insider trading and does not list markets directly tied to death.

    On X, Tarek Mansour, the platform’s Chief Executive, said the company did not profit from the Khamenei market after refunding fees to users.

    Nonetheless, the episode still exposed how messy these products can become when real-world events outrun the assumptions traders bring to the market.

    Polymarket sits in a different position. The platform is currently mostly operating overseas, and it has defended its model by saying that prediction markets harness the wisdom of crowds to create accurate, unbiased forecasts. The platform is making substantial efforts to reenter the US market.

    However, it is the same platform that has become the symbol of the current backlash because so much of the controversial volume, including the Iran-related trading and the market on a global nuclear explosion, was concentrated there.

    That split matters because it points to the likely shape of any crackdown.

    Washington has the clearest leverage over regulated US exchanges such as Kalshi. Offshore venues that rely on crypto rails are harder to police directly.

    So, that raises the prospect of a two-tier market in which the most controversial contracts are pushed abroad while domestic platforms stay inside a narrower regulatory perimeter.

    Notably, CFTC Chairman Michael Selig acknowledged that risk this week when he warned that blocking these markets outright could simply drive them offshore, “just like crypto.”

    US legislative efforts on prediction markets

    In light of the above, the policy response now taking shape in Washington is best understood as three overlapping tracks.

    The first is a targeted push against war-linked and death-adjacent contracts. Levin and Murphy are working on legislation meant to ban restrictions on contracts that they say exploit military action or reward access to sensitive information.

    Levin believes the Commodity Exchange Act, which already bars event contracts considered contrary to the public interest, still leaves too much room for such wagers to exist.

    The second is an ethics bill aimed at public officials. Here, Merkley and Klobuchar wants to ban the president, vice president, members of Congress, and other public officials from trading event contracts.

    CryptoSlate Daily Brief

    Daily signals, zero noise.

    Market-moving headlines and context delivered every morning in one tight read.

    5-minute digest 100k+ readers

    Free. No spam. Unsubscribe any time.

    Whoops, looks like there was a problem. Please try again.

    You’re subscribed. Welcome aboard.

    Merkley framed the issue not as a fight over market innovation but as a question of public trust, saying:

    “When public officials use non-public information to win a bet, you have the perfect recipe to undermine the public’s belief that government officials are working for the public good, not for their own personal profits. “Perfectly timed bets on prediction markets have the unmistakable stench of corruption.”

    The third track runs through the CFTC itself. On Feb. 4, the agency withdrew the prior administration’s proposed event-contract rule and said it would pursue a new rulemaking instead.

    Then, this week, Reuters reported that the CFTC sent an advance notice of proposed rulemaking to the White House budget office, the first formal step in building a new framework.

    Selig has made clear that he does not want the United States to respond by trying to eliminate the sector. He wants the government to define the rules and preserve federal control over lawful contracts.

    Meanwhile, that regulatory approach is colliding with state-level resistance.

    On Feb. 17, the CFTC filed an amicus brief in a Ninth Circuit case to reaffirm its exclusive jurisdiction over commodity derivatives markets, including prediction markets.

    Selig said CFTC-registered exchanges had faced an “onslaught of lawsuits” designed to undermine the agency’s sole regulatory authority.

    In other words, Washington is not only debating what contracts should be legal. It is also fighting over who gets to decide.

    Wall Street raises the stakes

    The timing of these moves comes at an awkward moment for policymakers, as prediction markets are no longer a fringe experiment.

    Data from the crypto research firm Predictefy showed that weekly transactions on these platforms reached nearly 45 million, with notional volume exceeding $6 billion.

    At the same time, traditional financial institutions like Intercontinental Exchange, the parent of the New York Stock Exchange, said in October that it would invest up to $2 billion in Polymarket.

    That institutional interest complicates the politics. For industry backers, it is evidence that prediction markets are becoming part of mainstream market structure and should be regulated like other derivatives.

    For critics, it means a business once dismissed as a novelty is now attracting serious capital even as the most inflammatory contracts center on war, assassination, and government action.

    Considering this, the likely outcome of Washington’s latest regulatory onslaught is not a blanket ban on prediction markets.

    Congress is divided, the CFTC is moving toward rulemaking rather than prohibition, and platforms still argue that event contracts can serve legitimate forecasting and hedging functions.

    However, the Iran wagers appear to have changed the conversation in one important way. They gave opponents a vivid example of how prediction markets can collide with national security, official ethics, and public outrage all at once.

    That makes the next battle less about whether prediction markets should exist and more about which ones Washington is willing to tolerate.

    If lawmakers succeed, contracts tied to war, death, and sensitive government action may become the first casualties. If regulators move faster than Congress, the US may end up with a narrower, more formalized onshore market while offshore venues continue to test how far crypto-based betting can go.

    Either way, the era when prediction markets could present themselves as a niche experiment on the edge of finance is ending.

    $BANK Presale$BANK Presale
    Mentioned in this article

    Legislation,Macro,Market,Regulation,Technology,TradFi,Kalshi,Polymarket,Prediction MarketKalshi,Polymarket,Prediction Market#lawmakers #ban #prediction #markets #Iran #bets1772832525

    Ban Bets Iran Kalshi Lawmakers markets Polymarket Prediction Prediction Market
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    行政
    • Website

    Related Posts

    AI is boosting demand for high skill tech jobs while quietly killing entry-level roles

    March 7, 2026

    Bitcoin’s $73,000 rally faces crucial test as momentum seeks shift

    March 6, 2026

    Oil shock could send Bitcoin down 45% if price surge forces Fed to delay cuts

    March 6, 2026

    The $3 trillion private credit boom is starting to crack — and Bitcoin could feel it first

    March 6, 2026
    Add A Comment

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    Millennials Are Quitting Job to Become Day Traders

    January 20, 2021

    Jack Dorsey Says Bitcoin Will Unite The World

    January 15, 2021

    Hong Kong Customs Arrest Four in Crypto Laundering Bust

    January 15, 2021

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest sports news from SportsSite about soccer, football and tennis.

    Advertisement
    Demo

    Your source for the serious news. This demo is crafted specifically to exhibit the use of the theme as a news site. Visit our main page for more demos.

    We're social. Connect with us:

    Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest YouTube
    Top Insights

    AI is boosting demand for high skill tech jobs while quietly killing entry-level roles

    March 7, 2026

    US lawmakers consider ban on prediction markets amid Iran bets

    March 6, 2026

    Bitcoin’s $73,000 rally faces crucial test as momentum seeks shift

    March 6, 2026
    Get Informed

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest
    • Home
    • Business
    • Markets
    • Technology
    • Contact us
    © 2026 ThemeSphere. Designed by WPfastworld.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.