Polymarket faced fresh regulatory pressure after two U.S. senators urged the Commodity Futures Trading Commission to investigate its influencer marketing. Republican Senator John Curtis and Democratic Senator Adam Schiff sent the request after reports of staged bet videos.
The Polymarket case added another test for the CFTC as prediction markets drew stronger political scrutiny. Lawmakers argued that event contracts now looked closer to gambling than hedging tools.
Curtis and Schiff sent a letter to CFTC Chair Michael Selig on Thursday. They asked whether the agency had started an investigation into Polymarket’s marketing practices.
The senators said the reported conduct raised concerns about deceptive promotions. They also questioned whether the CFTC had enough resources to police prediction markets.
The Wall Street Journal reported on June 20 that Polymarket paid influencers to make fake trading videos. The videos appeared on websites that resembled the platform but did not process real trades.
The Journal reviewed over 1,100 videos tied to the campaign. It found that 70% showed fake bets amounting to nearly $2 million.
That finding gave lawmakers a narrow but damaging allegation. The issue did not concern weak disclosure alone. It centered on whether paid content misrepresented trading outcomes to potential users.
Polymarket told Cointelegraph earlier that it was auditing active promotional content. The company said the review covered internal standards and regulatory disclosure rules.
However, Polymarket declined further comment on the senators’ letter. It also did not address reports that the CFTC had opened a wider inquiry.
CNBC reported Friday that the CFTC had an ongoing investigation into Polymarket. The report cited a person familiar with the inquiry, but gave no start date.
The Wall Street Journal also reported that the agency had examined the platform. The CFTC had not publicly confirmed the scope of the matter.
Curtis and Schiff framed the issue as a jurisdiction problem. They said the agency had repeatedly claimed authority over prediction markets and event contracts.
That position placed the CFTC in a difficult policy corner. If it treated these contracts as derivatives, it also carried responsibility for consumer risks.
Source: John Curtis
The senators said creators had portrayed prediction markets as easy money. They argued that such promotion weakened claims that the products served financial hedging functions.
Their letter also asked whether the reported advertising violated federal rules. That question narrowed attention toward disclosure, consumer protection, and platform supervision.
The issue arrived as prediction markets saw strong retail interest. Political events, sports outcomes, and financial questions helped drive user activity across the sector.
But that growth also increased regulatory friction. State gambling authorities had challenged similar platforms over alleged unlicensed sports betting.
Polymarket operates around event-based contracts, where users trade outcomes tied to real events. Supporters view these markets as tools for price discovery and public forecasting.
Regulators have treated that argument with caution. When contracts resemble wagers, the legal boundary becomes harder to defend.
The senators made that concern explicit in their letter. They said the products should not receive derivative treatment without clear hedging value.
That argument mattered because CFTC oversight could preempt state gambling enforcement. The agency had already pushed back against several state actions involving prediction platforms.
The fake bet allegations weakened the industry’s public-interest argument. If marketing stressed quick profits, lawmakers could view user protection as the main policy issue.
The reported campaign also raised a platform governance question. Polymarket had to show that third-party creators followed disclosure rules and internal controls.
That task may prove difficult after viral distribution. Social media campaigns spread faster than compliance teams can review every creator post.
The CFTC inquiry could therefore widen beyond one ad campaign. It may examine how prediction platforms approve promotions and monitor outside marketers.
Curtis and Schiff asked Selig to provide written answers by July 10. Their questions covered the investigation, advertising legality, and agency capacity.
Polymarket now faced a narrower timeline than the broader prediction market debate. The next pressure point was the CFTC response deadline.
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