The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) issued new no‑action relief covering swap data reporting for fully collateralized event contracts. In its announcement, the CFTC’s Division of Market Oversight and Division of Clearing and Risk said they will not recommend enforcement for certain swap‑related recordkeeping failures tied to these contracts.
They will also refrain from action when firms do not report specific data on fully collateralized event contract transactions to swap data repositories, provided that the firms meet the terms of the letter. This relief responds directly to multiple requests from exchanges and clearinghouses that list and clear event contracts.
Event contracts, also called prediction or information contracts, pay out based on clear outcomes, such as economic indicators, company earnings, or weather events. Some products, like contracts on terrorism, war, or certain political events, remain off‑limits because CFTC rules treat them as contrary to the public interest. The new relief keeps those limits in place and instead focuses on how firms report trades that are already allowed.
Why Event Contract Platforms Pushed for This
Several designated contract markets and derivatives clearing organizations told the CFTC that current swap reporting rules do not fit neatly with fully collateralized event contracts. These products often involve smaller ticket sizes and a high number of retail users, which can make detailed reporting burdensome for platforms and clearinghouses. The CFTC has been reviewing how to regulate prediction markets more broadly, including earlier no-action letters and an advance notice of proposed rulemaking this year.
Staff had already given narrow no-action relief in 2025 for some binary event options, but firms kept asking for similar treatment as new products and platforms launched. In the new letter, the divisions say they intend to “streamline” how they handle these requests and maintain consistent treatment across the market. Entities listing similar event contracts can apply to join the same no‑action relief, instead of waiting for a brand‑new letter each time.
The CFTC’s staff move does not rewrite the core rules for event contracts, but it sends a signal about how quickly the market is growing.
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