Court Blocks Tennessee From Taking Action on Kalshi


Court Blocks Tennessee From Taking Action on Kalshi


A Tennessee federal judge has temporarily stopped state regulators from taking action against the prediction markets platform Kalshi, which had sued the state after being ordered to cease offering sports event contracts.

In an order on Monday, Judge Aleta Trauger supported Kalshi’s earlier motion for a preliminary injunction and temporary restraining order against the Tennessee Sports Wagering Council and the state’s attorney general while the court case moves ahead.

The judge said Kalshi “will suffer irreparable injury and loss” by the regulator’s actions, and the company “is likely to succeed on the merits of its claims and its rights will likely be violated” unless the regulator is restrained.

The Tennessee Sports Wagering Council sent Kalshi, Polymarket and Crypto.com cease-and-desist letters on Friday, ordering them to stop offering sports event contracts in the state.

Source: Daniel Wallach

The regulator accused all three of offering sports wagering products without a license. It ordered them to stop offering the products in Tennessee, void all contracts, and refund all users in the state by Jan. 31, threatening fines of up to $25,000 per offense.

Kalshi sues Tennessee, arguing it overstepped

Shortly after receiving the letter, Kalshi sued the Sports Wagering Council; its chair, William Orgen; and its executive director, Mary Beth Thomas, along with state attorney general Jonathan Skrmetti.

The company argued that, as a federally designated derivatives exchange, it is subject to the “exclusive jurisdiction” of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

“Tennessee’s intent to regulate Kalshi intrudes upon the federal regulatory framework that Congress established for regulating derivatives on designated exchanges,” Kalshi said.

Related: CFTC issues no-action letter to Bitnomial, clearing way for event contracts

Kalshi has made similar arguments in lawsuits it has launched against other state regulators, which had also issued the company and some of its rivals with cease-and-desist letters, arguing that prediction market platforms must be licensed at the state level.

Courts in Nevada and New Jersey have sided with Kalshi to block state regulators from taking action while the company’s lawsuits play out, but a judge in Maryland denied Kalshi’s request for a temporary block.

Tennessee’s action against Kalshi is frozen until a preliminary injunction hearing slated for Jan. 26, and the platform is free to continue operating in the state.

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