In a move that reads like the opening chapter of a legal thriller, a federal judge in Arizona has temporarily put a gag order on the state’s gambling laws as they apply to Kalshi, siding with federal regulators. The pause lasts until April 24 and, if you squint just so, suggests that Kalshi’s event-based contracts may be more accurately categorized under federal derivatives law than the state’s home-spun gambling rules.
U.S. District Court Sides With Federal Regulators
On April 10, U.S. District Judge Michael Liburdi granted a temporary restraining order preventing Arizona from pursuing criminal or civil action against Kalshi. The decision followed a request from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), which argued the platform operates under federal jurisdiction, like a teenager insisting on driving privileges while promising to keep the receipts.
Arizona had filed 20 misdemeanor counts against Kalshi, accusing the company of running an unlicensed wagering business involving elections and sports outcomes. Yes, twenty. That’s enough legal noise to fill a small filing cabinet with warnings and bullet points about “how not to run a betting empire.”
However, the court indicated the CFTC is likely to succeed in arguing that Kalshi’s contracts qualify as “swaps” under the Commodity Exchange Act, placing them under federal oversight. Translation: the feds might well have the jurisdictional high ground, and Arizona might want to read the manual on derivatives before arguments next time.
The restraining order remains active until April 24, when the court will decide whether to issue a longer-term injunction. It’s essentially a legal pause button with a definite expiration date and a lot of paperwork in between.
Why States Are Challenging Kalshi?
Kalshi allows users to trade “Yes” or “No” contracts based on event outcomes. The company argues these are financial contracts traded between participants, not bets placed against a house that’s quietly plotting your financial undoing.
State regulators, including Arizona, view the activity as gambling. Last week, Nevada extended a ban on Kalshi, while Utah lawmakers passed legislation targeting similar prediction contracts. It’s the old debate about whether you’re watching a clever market device or a straight-up parlor game with a license, a gavel, and far too many forms to fill out.
The disagreement centers on whether event markets should be treated as derivatives or betting platforms.
Kalshi’s Rapid Growth Adds Stakes
The legal battle comes as Kalshi rapidly expands. As of April 2026, the platform is valued at around $22 billion following a March funding round. It currently accounts for roughly 89% of U.S. prediction market volume, making it the dominant player in a field that can feel oddly prophetic and perfectly nerve-wracking at the same time.
User growth has also surged. Monthly active users increased from about 600,000 at the start of 2025 to around 5.1 million by early 2026. Trading activity is accelerating as well. In March 2026 alone, Kalshi recorded $13.1 billion in transaction volume, marking a 25.2% jump from the previous month.
These numbers highlight why the classification debate has become more important for regulators.
Next Key Date: 24th April
The temporary order remains in effect until April 24, when the court will consider issuing a preliminary injunction. Meanwhile, Kalshi continues its civil claims against several states, because apparently lawsuits are the new sport in the corporate Olympics and everyone wants a gold medal in paperwork.
The case may shape how prediction markets are regulated in the U.S., determining whether they are treated as financial instruments or gambling products. And yes, we all know how gripping a debate about derivatives can be on a Tuesday afternoon, especially when your coffee is going cold in protest.
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2026-04-11 12:37