The CFTC’s July 14 stay of Kalshi’s proposed trade cancellations in Michigan is not mainly a gambling-policy fight. It is a market-structure fight over whether a state can force a federally regulated exchange to unwind executed event contracts after the fact.
Why the CFTC stepped in against Kalshi’s own emergency plan
On June 29, a Michigan court issued a temporary restraining order barring Kalshi from offering sports event contracts to Michigan residents and requiring the exchange to cancel and refund existing trades. The order carried fines of $120,000 per day for noncompliance, putting Kalshi in a position where obeying the state order could conflict with its federal obligations as a designated contract market.
Kalshi’s answer was a July 12 emergency rule filing that would have force-liquidated affected Michigan positions and used the company’s own funds to absorb any losses, rather than passing them to other participants. Two days later, the CFTC stayed that rule and directed Kalshi to keep the open Michigan trades in place and settle them through normal market procedures while the agency reviews the filing.
That sequence matters because the federal regulator did not just defend Kalshi’s right to list contracts. It specifically blocked the cancellation of already executed trades, drawing a line around operational certainty in a regulated derivatives market.
Executed contracts are the real fault line
CFTC Chairman Michael S. Selig framed the issue as federal preemption under the Commodity Exchange Act, not a generic dispute over sports wagering. His warning was that if a state can compel the retroactive unwinding of swaps traded on a CFTC-regulated venue, then the reliability of executed contracts across the derivatives market becomes weaker.
That is the practical distinction between signal and narrative here. The narrative says Michigan is trying to stop unlicensed sports betting; the signal is that the CFTC is defending the finality of matched trades, because participants make pricing, hedging, and liquidity decisions on the assumption that an executed contract on a federal exchange will settle under the exchange rulebook rather than be voided by a later state action.
For market operators, this is not abstract legal language. If traders have to price in the risk that state-by-state enforcement can erase completed positions, spreads widen, inventory becomes harder to manage, and retail participation becomes less useful as a source of liquidity.
Michigan’s deadlines versus the CFTC’s review clock
Michigan has not backed off. The state extended its order and requires Kalshi to implement geofencing by August 12, with fines rising to as much as $500,000 per day beginning August 13. That means the exchange faces immediate state-level operating pressure even as the CFTC insists the existing trades must be honored.
The CFTC, meanwhile, has up to 90 days to review Kalshi’s emergency rule proposal, including a public comment process. So the timing mismatch is part of the risk: state enforcement is moving on a near-term deadline, while the federal determination on how Kalshi may handle these contracts is running on a longer administrative track.
| Date / checkpoint | Actor | Action | Market consequence |
|---|---|---|---|
| June 29 | Michigan court | Temporary restraining order bars sports event contracts and requires cancellation/refunds | Threatens retroactive unwind of open and existing positions |
| July 12 | Kalshi | Emergency rule proposes forced liquidation and company-funded loss coverage | Attempts to isolate damage to broader market participants |
| July 14 | CFTC | Stays Kalshi’s emergency rule and orders normal settlement of open Michigan trades | Preserves contract finality while review continues |
| August 12 | Michigan | Geofencing deadline | Operational restriction can tighten user access even if old trades remain live |
| August 13 onward | Michigan | Fines up to $500,000 per day | Raises direct cost of noncompliance regardless of federal review status |
The upside for Kalshi is national market continuity; the cost is legal and product uncertainty
If the CFTC’s preemption theory holds, Kalshi and similar venues gain something very valuable: a stronger argument that federally regulated event contracts can trade under one national rule set rather than a patchwork of state gaming regimes. That would support deeper liquidity, more stable pricing, and fewer interruptions for products that rely on broad geographic participation.
The friction is that this protection does not remove near-term business risk. Michigan’s Gaming Control Board and Attorney General Dana Nessel are treating the contracts as unlicensed sports betting, and similar state challenges have surfaced in Nevada and New Jersey. For a platform that also wants to expand into perpetual futures across crypto, metals, FX, and energy, unresolved jurisdictional fights can complicate product rollout, compliance spending, and partner confidence even if federal law eventually wins the core classification battle.
That trade-off is especially relevant in crypto-adjacent markets. Kalshi has already pushed into CFTC-supervised perpetual crypto futures and reported $16.1 billion in trading volume, so the Michigan case is also a test of whether a federally licensed venue can scale novel contracts without state enforcement turning access, settlement, or user geography into a recurring liquidity drag.
Questions traders and operators should keep in view
Does the CFTC stay mean Michigan lost?
No. The stay only blocks Kalshi’s proposed cancellation mechanism for now and requires normal settlement of the affected trades while federal review continues.
What is the next real checkpoint?
The CFTC’s final decision on Kalshi’s emergency rule within the 90-day review window is one checkpoint. Court rulings on federal preemption in Michigan, and any similar cases in other states, may matter even more.
What would count as a negative market signal from here?
A ruling that allows states to unwind executed contracts on a CFTC-regulated market would be the clearest negative signal. That would raise settlement uncertainty well beyond prediction markets.
What should exchanges watch operationally?
Geofencing deadlines, state fine schedules, and whether regulators target existing positions or only future access. The difference between blocking new users and canceling old trades is the difference between a distribution problem and a market-integrity problem.

