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Sports BettingAsia Gaming Brief · Jun 17

US gaming coalition urges Senate to bar prediction markets from sports betting

By AGBrief EditorialJune 17, 2026

The brief

A coalition of US gaming operators has launched a coordinated advocacy effort aimed at persuading the Senate to enact legislation that would restrict prediction markets from entering or expanding within the sports betting sector. The push reflects growing competitive tensions between traditional regulated gaming operators and emerging prediction market platforms, which have gained prominence in recent years as alternative venues for event-based wagering.

Prediction markets, which allow participants to trade contracts tied to the outcomes of events—including sporting contests—operate under a different regulatory framework than conventional sportsbooks. The distinction has created ambiguity regarding whether prediction markets should be classified as betting platforms subject to sports betting regulations, or as financial derivatives markets governed by commodity and securities oversight. Gaming operators argue that prediction markets operating without equivalent licensing, tax, and consumer protection requirements create an uneven competitive landscape and potentially divert revenue from regulated channels.

The coalition's Senate outreach reflects the industry's broader concern that prediction markets could undermine the regulatory consensus and tax revenue models that have supported the expansion of legal sports betting across US states. Operators contend that prediction markets lack the responsible gambling safeguards, player verification systems, and anti-money laundering controls embedded in licensed sportsbooks. Additionally, the lack of uniform federal guidance on prediction market regulation has created uncertainty for both operators and regulators.

The outcome of this advocacy effort will likely hinge on how policymakers balance innovation and market access against consumer protection and tax revenue considerations. A Senate prohibition on prediction market sports betting would represent a significant regulatory victory for traditional gaming operators, but could face resistance from prediction market advocates and free-market proponents. The debate underscores the ongoing challenge of adapting gaming regulation to emerging technologies and business models that blur traditional category boundaries.

Original report

Asia Gaming Brief

Summary is editorial. Full reporting, images and rights belong to the source.

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